(of wood, rope, etc) having knots - get knotted! ⇒ 
used as a response to express disapproval or rejection  
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025
knot•ted 
(not′id),USA pronunciation adj. 
- having knots;
knotty. - tied in or fastened with a knot.
 - made or ornamented with knots.
 - Botanyhaving many nodes or nodelike swellings;
gnarled. - Zoologyhaving one or more swellings;
nodose. 
- Middle English cnotted. See knot1, -ed2, -ed3 1125–75
 
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
knot1 /nɑt/USA pronunciation  
n., v., knot•ted, knot•ting. 
n. [countable]
v.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025n. [countable]
- Naval Terms, Textilesa tying tightly together of the two ends of a cord, rope, or the like into a knob:to tie a knot securely.
 - a lump of something formed by tying into this shape:a knot of hair on the top of her head.
 - a tangled mass;
snarl:combed out the knots in the dog's fur. - a group or cluster of persons or things:a knot of spectators.
 - Botanythe hard, cross-grained mass of wood at the place where a branch joins a tree trunk;
a part of this mass showing in a piece of lumber. - Pathologya cramping, as of a muscle.
 - Nautical
- Naval Termsa unit of speed equal to one nautical mile or about 1.15 statute miles per hour.
 - Naval Termsa nautical mile.
 
 - a bond or tie:the knot of matrimony.
 
v.
- to (cause to) become tied or tangled in a knot: [~ + object]He knotted the rope.[no object]The rope is too wet to knot easily.
 - to (cause to) have a feeling of tension or nervousness (in): [no object]His stomach knotted in fear.[~ + object]The excitement knotted his stomach.
 
knot1 
(not),USA pronunciation n., v., knot•ted, knot•ting. 
n.
v.t.
v.i.
 knot′less, adj. 
knot′like′, adj.
 
knot2 (not),USA pronunciation n.
n.
- Naval Termsan interlacing, twining, looping, etc., of a cord, rope, or the like, drawn tight into a knob or lump, for fastening, binding, or connecting two cords together or a cord to something else.
 - Clothinga piece of ribbon or similar material tied or folded upon itself and used or worn as an ornament.
 - a group or cluster of persons or things:a knot of spectators.
 - Botanythe hard, cross-grained mass of wood at the place where a branch joins the trunk of a tree.
 - a part of this mass showing in a piece of lumber, wood panel, etc.
 - Zoology[Anat., Zool.]a protuberance or swelling on or in a part or process, as in a muscle.
 - Botanya protuberance in the tissue of a plant;
an excrescence on a stem, branch, or root;
a node or joint in a stem, esp. when of swollen form. - Plant Diseasesany of various fungal diseases of trees characterized by the formation of an excrescence, knob, or gnarl.
 - an involved, intricate, or difficult matter;
complicated problem. - Nautical
- Naval Termsa unit of speed equal to one nautical mile or about 1.15 statute miles per hour.
 - Naval Termsa unit of 47 feet 3 inches (13.79 meters) on a log line, marked off by knots.
 - Naval Termsa nautical mile.
 
 - a bond or tie:the knot of matrimony.
 - Also called joint, node. [Math.]in interpolation, one of the points at which the values of a function are assigned.
 - Idioms tie the knot, [Informal.]to marry:They will tie the knot in November.
 
v.t.
- to tie in a knot;
form a knot in. - to secure or fasten by a knot.
 - to form protuberances, bosses, or knobs in;
make knotty. 
v.i.
- to become tied or tangled in a knot.
 - to form knots or joints.
 
- bef. 1000; (noun, nominal) Middle English knot(te), Old English cnotta; cognate with Dutch knot, German knoten to knit; (verb, verbal) Middle English, derivative of the noun, nominal
 
knot′like′, adj.
- 3.See corresponding entry in Unabridged company, band, crew, gang, crowd.
 - 7.See corresponding entry in Unabridged lump, knob, gnarl.
 - 9.See corresponding entry in Unabridged perplexity, puzzle, conundrum.
 
knot2 (not),USA pronunciation n.
- Birdseither of two large sandpipers, Calidris canutus or C. tenuirostris, that breed in the Arctic and winter in the Southern Hemisphere. Also called grayback.
 
- 1425–75; late Middle English; origin, originally uncertain
 
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
any of various fastenings formed by looping and tying a piece of rope, cord, etc, in upon itself, to another piece of rope, or to another object a prescribed method of tying a particular knot a tangle, as in hair or string a decorative bow or fastening, as of ribbon or braid a small cluster or huddled group a tie or bond: the marriage knot a difficult problem a hard mass of wood at the point where a branch joins the trunk of a tree a cross section of this, usually roundish and cross-grained, visible in a piece of timber a sensation of constriction, caused by tension or nervousness: his stomach was tying itself in knots a lump of vessels or fibres formed in a part, as in a muscle a unit of speed used by nautical vessels and aircraft, being one nautical mile (about 1.15 statute miles or 1.85 km) per hour - at a rate of knots ⇒ 
very fast  - tie someone in knots ⇒ 
to completely perplex or confuse someone  
- (transitive)
to tie or fasten in a knot  to form or cause to form into a knot to ravel or entangle or become ravelled or entangled - (transitive)
to make (an article or a design) by tying thread in an interlaced pattern of ornamental knots, as in macramé  
a small northern sandpiper, Calidris canutus, with a short bill and grey plumage 
'knotted' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
Cordelier
 - Oriental rug
 - bow
 - cat-o'-nine-tails
 - compare
 - filet lace
 - geniculate
 - gnarl
 - interknot
 - knot
 - macramé
 - mesh
 - nowy
 - quipu
 - reknot
 - tangle
 - tatting
 - tie
 - unknot
 - varicose veins
 - well-knotted