"with the hip dislocated," 1630s, from hip (n.1) + shot (adj.). The notion is "with the hip shot out of place."
Entries linking to hip-shot
hip n.1
"part of the human body where pelvis and thigh join," Old English hype "hip," from Proto-Germanic *hupiz (source also of Dutch heup, Old High German huf, German Hüfte, Swedish höft, Gothic hups "hip"), of uncertain origin. In architecture, "external angle at the junction of two sides of a roof," from late 17c. Hip-flask, one meant to fit in a hip pocket, is from 1923. Related: Hips.
shot adj.
early 15c., of fish (implied in shotfish), "having discharged its spawn," past-participle adjective from shoot (v.). The meaning "wounded or killed by a bullet or other projectile" is from 1837.
The modern slang figurative sense of "ruined, used up, worn out" is attested by 1933, American English; the slang phrase shot to hell "in a state of collapse" is attested by 1926 (Hemingway).