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View synonyms for butt
butt
1[ buht ]
noun
- the end or extremity of anything, especially the thicker, larger, or blunt end considered as a bottom, base, support, or handle, as of a log, fishing rod, or pistol.
- an end that is not used or consumed; remnant:
a cigar butt.
- a lean cut of pork shoulder.
- Slang. the buttocks.
- Slang. a cigarette.
butt
2[ buht ]
noun
- a person or thing that is an object of wit, ridicule, sarcasm, contempt, etc.
Synonyms: patsy, pigeon, prey, laughingstock, gull, dupe, mark, target, victim
- a target.
- (on a rifle range)
- a wall of earth located behind the targets to prevent bullets from scattering over a large area.
- butts, a wall behind which targets can be safely lowered, scored, and raised during firing practice.
- Obsolete. a goal; limit.
verb (used without object)
- to have an end or projection on; be adjacent to; abut.
verb (used with object)
- to position or fasten an end (of something).
- to place or join the ends (of two things) together; set end-to-end.
butt
3[ buht ]
verb (used with object)
- to strike or push with the head or horns.
verb (used without object)
- to strike or push something or at something with the head or horns.
- to project.
- Machinery. (of wheels in a gear train) to strike one another instead of meshing.
noun
- a push or blow with the head or horns.
verb phrase
- to stop meddling in the affairs or intruding in the conversation of others:
I tried to talk some sense into him and was told to butt out.
- to meddle in the affairs or intrude in the conversation of others; interfere:
It was none of his concern, so he didn't butt in.
butt
4[ buht ]
noun
- a large cask for wine, beer, or ale.
- any cask or barrel.
- any of various units of capacity, usually considered equal to two hogsheads.
butt
5or but
[ buht ]
noun
, plural (especially collectively) butt, (especially referring to two or more kinds or species) butts.
- any of several flatfishes, especially the halibut.
butt
1/ bʌt /
noun
- a large cask, esp one with a capacity of two hogsheads, for storing wine or beer
- a US unit of liquid measure equal to 126 US gallons
butt
2/ bʌt /
noun
- the thicker or blunt end of something, such as the end of the stock of a rifle
- the unused end of something, esp of a cigarette; stub
- tanning the portion of a hide covering the lower backside of the animal
- informal.the buttocks
- a slang word for cigarette
- building trades short for butt joint butt hinge
butt
3/ bʌt /
noun
- a person or thing that is the target of ridicule, wit, etc
- shooting archery
- a mound of earth behind the target on a target range that stops bullets or wide shots
- the target itself
- plural the target range
- a low barrier, usually of sods or peat, behind which sportsmen shoot game birds, esp grouse
- archaic.goal; aim
verb
- usually foll byon or against to lie or be placed end on to; abut
to butt a beam against a wall
butt
4/ bʌt /
verb
- to strike or push (something) with the head or horns
- intr to project; jut
- intr; foll by in or into to intrude, esp into a conversation; interfere; meddle
- butt out informal.to stop interfering or meddling
noun
- a blow with the head or horns
Butt
5/ bʌt /
noun
- ButtClara18721936FEnglishMUSIC: contralto Dame Clara . 1872–1936, English contralto
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Derived Forms
- ˈbutter, noun
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Word History and Origins
Origin of butt1
First recorded in 1400–50; late Middle English bott “(thick) end, buttock,” Old English butt “tree stump” (in placenames); akin to Swedish but “stump,” Danish but “stubby”; further origin uncertain; buttock
Origin of butt2
First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English, from Middle French but “target, goal,” probably ultimately from Old Norse bútr “stump, log” (from the use of a wooden block or stump as a target in archery, etc.); butt 1, butte ( def )
Origin of butt3
First recorded in 1150–1200; Middle English butten, bouten, from Anglo-French buter, butter, Old French bouter, buter “to thrust, strike,” from Germanic; compare Old Norse bauta “to strike,” Middle Dutch botten “to strike, sprout”; beat ( def )
Origin of butt4
First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English but(t)e, bot(t), from Anglo-French bo(u)t(e); Middle French, from Old Provençal bota, from Late Latin butta, buttis, akin to Greek boût(t)is “vessel in the shape of a frustum of a cone” (of pre-Greek origin)
Origin of butt5
First recorded in 1250–1300; Middle English but(te), botte; cognate with Swedish butta “turbot,” German Butt “brill, turbot, flounder,” Dutch bot “flounder”
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Word History and Origins
Origin of butt1
C14: from Old French botte , from Old Provençal bota , from Late Latin buttis cask, perhaps from Greek butinē chamber pot
Origin of butt2
C15 (in the sense: thick end of something, buttock): related to Old English buttuc end, ridge, Middle Dutch bot stumpy
Origin of butt3
C14 (in the sense: mark for archery practice): from Old French but ; related to French butte knoll, target
Origin of butt4
C12: from Old French boter , of Germanic origin; compare Middle Dutch botten to strike; see beat , button
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