Advertisement
Advertisement
stirrup
[ stur-uhp, stir-, stuhr- ]
noun
- a loop, ring, or other contrivance of metal, wood, leather, etc., suspended from the saddle of a horse to support the rider's foot.
- any of various similar supports or clamps used for special purposes.
- Nautical. a short rope with an eye at the end hung from a yard to support a footrope, the footrope being rove through the eye.
- Also called binder. (in reinforced-concrete constructions) a U -shaped or W -shaped bent rod for supporting longitudinal reinforcing rods.
- Anatomy. stapes.
- a strap of fabric or elastic at the bottom of a pair of pants, worn around and under the foot.
- stirrups, (used with a plural verb) close-fitting knit pants with such straps.
stirrup
/ ˈstɪrəp /
noun
- Also calledstirrup iron either of two metal loops on a riding saddle, with a flat footpiece through which a rider puts his foot for support. They are attached to the saddle by stirrup leathers
- a U-shaped support or clamp made of metal, wood, leather, etc
- nautical one of a set of ropes fastened to a yard at one end and having a thimble at the other through which a footrope is rove for support
- the usual US name for étrier
Other Words From
- stirrup·less adjective
- stirrup·like adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of stirrup1
Example Sentences
At the farm, he leaves a foot between rows of Allium to allow for easy weeding with the six-inch blade of a stirrup hoe.
It bears traces of red paint with black trim and includes two leather straps that likely once supported stirrups.
Her legs are held high by stirrups while a man in a white medical coat explains he is about to put some medicine inside her uterus.
I remember the saddled and riderless horse with the big black boots stuck backwards in the stirrups.
When my feet were comfortably positioned in stirrups, she offered three words: “Rest is resistance,” taken from the title of the book by Tricia Hersey of the Nap Ministry.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse