invalid
/ɪnˈvæ.lɪd/
adjective
  1. no longer valid
  2. having no cogency or legal force
    an invalid driver's license
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. More at Wordnik
🌐
Merriam-Webster
merriam-webster.com › dictionary › invalid
INVALID Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
not valid:; being without foundation or force in fact, truth, or law; logically inconsequent… See the full definition
🌐
Vocabulary.com
vocabulary.com › dictionary › invalid
Invalid - Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | Vocabulary.com
Definitions of invalid · adjective no longer valid · “the license is invalid” · synonyms: expired · having come to an end or become void after passage of a period of time · adjective having no cogency or legal force · “invalid ...
🌐
Encyclopedia Britannica
britannica.com › dictionary › invalid
Invalid Definition & Meaning | Britannica Dictionary
invalid (adjective) invalid (noun) invalid (verb) 1 invalid /ɪnˈvæləd/ adjective · 1 invalid · /ɪnˈvæləd/ adjective · Britannica Dictionary definition of INVALID · : not valid: such as · a : having no force or effect · The judge ...
🌐
Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › us › dictionary › english › invalid
INVALID | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
invalid · adjective [ not gradable ] us · Your browser doesn't support HTML5 audio · /ɪnˈvæl·ɪd/ Add to word list Add to word list · not true or acceptable, or not correctly thought out: The results of the election were declared invalid ...
🌐
Collins Dictionary
collinsdictionary.com › us › dictionary › english › invalid
INVALID definition in American English | Collins English Dictionary
6 senses: 1. a. a person with disablement or chronic ill health b. (as modifier) 2. incapacitated or disabled by injury,.... Click for more definitions.
Published   March 26, 2018
🌐
Merriam-Webster
merriam-webster.com › thesaurus › invalid
INVALID Synonyms: 266 Similar and Opposite Words | Merriam-Webster Thesaurus
as in unsupported having no basis in reason or fact an invalid claim that can be easily disproved by the facts ... Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage.
🌐
Oxford Learner's Dictionaries
oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com › us › definition › english › invalid_2
invalid noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes | Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com
Her husband was an invalid and couldn’t come to the door to open it.Topics Health problemsc2 · Word Originnoun mid 17th cent. (as an adjective in the sense ‘infirm or disabled’): a special sense of invalid (adjective), with a change of pronunciation.
Find elsewhere
🌐
Dictionary.com
dictionary.com › browse › invalid
INVALID Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com
INVALID definition: an infirm or sickly person. See examples of invalid used in a sentence.
🌐
YourDictionary
yourdictionary.com › home › dictionary meanings › invalid definition
Invalid Definition & Meaning | YourDictionary
An invalid argument. American Heritage More Adjective Definitions (1) Synonyms: Synonyms: void · of no efficacy · null-and-void · inoperative · inauthentic · null · nugatory · valetudinarian · unlawful · unfounded · powerless · baseless · unsound · false ·
🌐
Longman
ldoceonline.com › dictionary › invalid
invalid | meaning of invalid in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English | LDOCE
Word family (noun) validity ≠ ... ticket will be invalid.2 WRONG/INCORRECTan argument, reason etc that is invalid is not based on true facts or clear ideas, and lacks good judgment OPP valid3 if something you type into a computer is invalid, the computer does not ...
🌐
Collins Dictionary
collinsdictionary.com › us › dictionary › english-thesaurus › invalid
Synonyms of INVALID | Collins American English Thesaurus
invalid · 1 (adjective) in the sense of null and void · Definition · having no legal force · The trial was stopped and the results declared invalid. Synonyms · null and void · void · The elections were declared void by the former military ...
🌐
Wiktionary
en.wiktionary.org › wiki › invalid
invalid - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
The Japanese armored cruiser Nisshin has been hit badly. Shells have sheared off several main guns and virtually disarmed the vessel. In the middle of all this, one Ensign Isoroku Yamamoto loses two fingers to the remains of an explosion. If he'd lost a third, he would've been invalided out of military service.
🌐
Oxford English Dictionary
oed.com › dictionary › invalid_adj1
invalid, adj.¹ meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
There are two meanings listed in OED's entry for the adjective invalid, one of which is labelled obsolete.
🌐
GRAMMARIST
grammarist.com › home › heteronyms › invalid vs invalid
Invalid vs invalid
September 18, 2022 - An argument that is invalid is false or unscientific and relies on faulty logic or outright deceit. The word invalid is an adjective that is also derived from the Latin word invalidus, in the sense of being weak or feeble.
🌐
TheFreeDictionary.com
thefreedictionary.com › invalid
Invalid - definition of invalid by The Free Dictionary
adjective · 1. null and void, ... and void valid, operative, viable · 2. unfounded, false, untrue, illogical, irrational, unsound, unscientific, baseless, fallacious, ill-founded Those arguments are rendered invalid by the ...
🌐
Websters Dictionary 1828
webstersdictionary1828.com › Home
Websters Dictionary 1828 - Webster's Dictionary 1828 - Invalid
INVAL'ID, adjective [Latin invalidus; in and validus, strong, from valeo, to be strong, to avail.] 1. Weak, of no force, weight or cogency. 2. In law, having no force, effect or efficacy; void; null; as an invalid contract or agreement.
🌐
Thesaurus.com
thesaurus.com › browse › invalid
INVALID Synonyms & Antonyms - 81 words | Thesaurus.com
Find 81 different ways to say INVALID, along with antonyms, related words, and example sentences at Thesaurus.com.
Top answer
1 of 5
22

invalid there is a noun.

invalid (n) - Someone who is incapacitated by a chronic illness or injury.

Having this said, his wife seems to be very sick, in a crucial condition that might have made her incapacitated.

Now since there's discussion about the degree of being incapacitated (which makes you ultimately invalid), I'm adding a bit to improve this answer.

Here is another reference from OLD:

invalid (n) - a person who needs other people to take care of them, because of illness that they have had for a long time.

Now, if you look at both the definitions, you see that the term invalid ranges from someone being assisted by others to walk, eat or do routine activity to someone who is permanently bedridden (as in the last stage of cancers). Contrary to what Doc and FumbleFingers, it is not always necessary that invalid person is so so so sick that he/she is on the deathbed. And, I'm a doctor and have come across many such patients with chronic illness (in fact, have worked in hospitals that only take such cases).

The OLD further explains it in its example:

She had been a delicate child and her parents had treated her as an invalid

Furthermore, delicate here means:

delicate (n) - (of a person) not strong and easily becoming sick

That's where the WordWeb definition fits in. Invalid is someone who is incapacitated - not able to perform their tasks because of illness that has brought weakness. Here, the child does not necessary to have Ryley's tube or Folly's catheter as Doc mentions.

On the other hand, invalid does not always mean that the person is just incapable to do things and is not so critical. That's why I said, the term applies to incapacitation and this varies from degree to degree depending on the illness that person has.

Check this here:

If you see Saturnino Soncko (a person working in the silver mines of Cerro Rico), he's certainly invalid but I can still argue and deny calling him invalid as at least he is not that incapacitated! In that picture at least he is sitting without any assistance whereas invalid requires support even for this, don't they? They certainly do I see the woman every day. She is an invalid and cannot move anything other than her eyes.

Again, invalid is certainly a serious condition but it varies in degrees or severity depending upon the type of illness. I'm not sure to apply partially invalid or completely invalid for that though it might make better sense.

2 of 5
33

An invalid, pronounced with stress on the first syllable, is a person with a disability. The word is not used so often nowadays.

It is a noun and a different word to the adjective invalid, pronounced with stress on the second syllable, which means not valid.

So the last sentence of your question "Your husband is invalid" is incorrect, it would be "Your husband is an invalid".

🌐
Wordnik
wordnik.com › words › invalid
invalid — definition, examples, related words and more at Wordnik
transitive verb To classify or enroll as an invalid. adjective Of no force, weight, or cogency; not valid; weak.