Unnerved and shaken, one's composure knocked off-balance by a shock, threat, or disturbing turn..
Unnerved and shaken, one's composure knocked off-balance by a shock, threat, or disturbing turn.
Rattled is composure jolted by impact — Merriam-Webster's synonym note pins it precisely: "an agitation that impairs thought and judgment" (rattled by all the television cameras). The image is mechanical and apt: something solid shaken until its parts knock loosely together. It implies a destabilizing shock from outside — a near-miss, a hostile question, an unexpected setback — that leaves you unsteady and second-guessing. It overlaps with flustered but carries more of fear or threat and less of social embarrassment: a boxer is rattled by a hard punch, a witness rattled under cross-examination. It is sharper and more event-driven than frazzled (slow attrition) and less total than overwhelmed (submersion).
Past-participle adjective of the verb rattle (c. 1300, intransitive), "to make a quick sharp noise with frequent repetitions and collisions of bodies," perhaps Old English (unrecorded) or from Middle Dutch ratelen, probably of imitative origin (compare German rasseln "to rattle"). The colloquial American English figurative sense "fluster, shake up, unsettle" is attested by 1869, on the notion of "startle or stir up by noisy means."
The word began purely as onomatopoeia for a clattering noise and has held that literal sense for seven centuries (windows rattling in the wind). The emotional meaning is comparatively recent and specifically American: by 1869 "to rattle" someone meant to unsettle or shake them up, built on the figure of being startled or stirred as if by sudden noise. That figurative branch is now fully standard.