different between hat vs fisher
hat
English
Pronunciation
- (UK, US) IPA(key): /hæt/
- (Canada, California, Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): [hat]
- (Northern US) IPA(key): [h?t]
- Rhymes: -æt
Etymology 1
From Middle English hat, from Old English hæt (“head-covering, hat”), from Proto-Germanic *hattuz (“hat”), from Proto-Indo-European *kad?- (“to guard, cover, care for, protect”). Cognate with North Frisian hat (“hat”), Danish hat (“hat”), Swedish hatt (“hat”), Icelandic hattur (“hat”), Latin cassis (“helmet”), Lithuanian kudas (“bird's crest or tuft”), Avestan ????????????????????? (xaoda, “hat”), Persian ???? (xud, “helmet”), Welsh cadw (“to provide for, ensure”). Compare also hood.
Noun
hat (plural hats)
- A covering for the head, often in the approximate form of a cone or a cylinder closed at its top end, and sometimes having a brim and other decoration.
- There was a neat hat-and-umbrella stand, and the stranger's weary feet fell soft on a good, serviceable dark-red drugget, which matched in colour the flock-paper on the walls.
- (figuratively) A particular role or capacity that a person might fill.
- 1993, Susan Loesser, A Most Remarkable Fella: Frank Loesser and the Guys and Dolls in His Life: A Portrait by His Daughter, Hal Leonard Corporation (2000), ?ISBN, p.121:
- My mother was wearing several hats in the early fifties: hostess, scout, wife, and mother.
- 1993, Susan Loesser, A Most Remarkable Fella: Frank Loesser and the Guys and Dolls in His Life: A Portrait by His Daughter, Hal Leonard Corporation (2000), ?ISBN, p.121:
- (figuratively) Any receptacle from which numbers/names are pulled out in a lottery.
- (figuratively, by extension) The lottery or draw itself.
- (figuratively, by extension) The lottery or draw itself.
- (video games) A hat switch.
- 2002, Ernest Pazera, Focus on SDL, p.139:
- The third type of function allows you to check on the state of the joystick's buttons, axes, hats, and balls.
- 2002, Ernest Pazera, Focus on SDL, p.139:
- (typography, nonstandard, rare) The há?ek symbol.
- 1997 October 6th, “Patricia V. Lehman” (user name), rec.antiques (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Unusual Mark – made in Cechoslovakia”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- I’lll have to leave it up to antiques experts to tell you when objects were marked that way, but I can tell you it’s called a “hacek” (with the hat over the “c” and pronounced “hacheck”.) It is used to show that a “c” is pronounced as “ch” and an “s” as “sh.” Sometimes linguists just call it the “hat.”
- 1997 October 6th, “Patricia V. Lehman” (user name), rec.antiques (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: Unusual Mark – made in Cechoslovakia”, Message ID: <[email protected]>#1/1
- (programming, informal) The caret symbol ^.
- (Internet slang) User rights on a website, such as the right to edit pages others cannot.
- (Cambridge University slang, obsolete) A student who is also the son of a nobleman (and so allowed to wear a hat instead of a mortarboard).
Synonyms
- (student and nobleman): gold hatband, tuft
Hyponyms
- See also Thesaurus:headwear
Derived terms
Descendants
- Sranan Tongo: ati
Translations
See also
- take one's hat off to
Verb
hat (third-person singular simple present hats, present participle hatting, simple past and past participle hatted)
- (transitive) To place a hat on.
- (transitive) To appoint as cardinal.
- 1929, "Five New Hats," Time, 2 December, 1929, [2]
- It was truly a breathtaking rise. From the quiet school, Pope Pius XI had jumped Father Verdier over the heads of innumerable Bishops, made him Archbishop of Paris. Soon he was to be hatted a Prince of the Church and put in charge of the Cathedral of Notre-Dame.
- 1929, "Five New Hats," Time, 2 December, 1929, [2]
Etymology 2
Verb
hat
- (Scotland, Northern England or obsolete) simple past tense of hit
References
- The Dictionary of the Scots Language
Further reading
- hat on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- ATH, aht, tha
Cimbrian
Verb
hat
- third-person singular present indicative of haban
Danish
Etymology
From Old Norse hattr, h?ttr.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [had?]
Noun
hat c (singular definite hatten, plural indefinite hatte)
- hat
Inflection
German
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /hat/
- Rhymes: -at
Verb
hat
- third-person singular present of haben
Hungarian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?h?t]
- Rhymes: -?t
Etymology 1
From Proto-Finno-Ugric *kutte (“six”). Cognates include Finnish kuusi, Mansi ???? (h?t), Khanty ??? (x?t).
Numeral
hat
- six
Declension
Derived terms
Etymology 2
Verb
hat
- (intransitive, obsolete) to get, arrive at, pass, progress towards (a certain location)
- Synonyms: hatol, ér, jut
- 1863, János Arany, Rege a csodaszarvasról (The Legend of the Wondrous Hunt, translated by E.D. Butler)
- Süppedékes mély tavaknak / Szigetére ?k behatnak.
- An island fair to reach, they pass / Through treacherous pool and deep morass.
- Süppedékes mély tavaknak / Szigetére ?k behatnak.
- (intransitive, archaic or literary) to enter, penetrate
- Synonym: hatol
- (intransitive) to take effect, to be effective, to work
- Synonyms: hatásos, m?ködik, beválik
- (intransitive) to affect, to have influence, to act (on something -ra/-re)
- Synonyms: kihat, érint, befolyásol
- (intransitive) to seem, appear (as something -nak/-nek)
- Synonyms: t?nik, látszik
Conjugation
Derived terms
(With verbal prefixes):
Further reading
- (six): hat in Bárczi, Géza and László Országh: A magyar nyelv értelmez? szótára (’The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language’). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992: ?ISBN
- (to take effect): hat in Bárczi, Géza and László Országh: A magyar nyelv értelmez? szótára (’The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language’). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992: ?ISBN
Irish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /hat??/
Noun
hat
- h-prothesized form of at
Verb
hat
- h-prothesized form of at
Kholosi
Etymology
From Sanskrit ???? (hasta).
Noun
hat ?
- (anatomy) hand
References
- Eric Anonby; Hassan Mohebi Bahmani (2014) , “Shipwrecked and Landlocked: Kholosi, an Indo-Aryan Language in South-west Iran”, in Cahier de Studia Iranica xx?[3], pages 13-36
Luxembourgish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ha?t/
Verb
hat
- inflection of hunn:
- first/third-person singular preterite indicative
- second-person plural preterite indicative
Verb
hat
- inflection of haen:
- second-person plural present indicative
- second-person plural imperative
Maricopa
Noun
hat (plural haat)
- dog
Middle English
Etymology 1
From Old English hæt, hætt, from Proto-Germanic *hattuz.
Alternative forms
- hatt, hatte, hæt
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /hat/
Noun
hat (plural hattes or hatten)
- A hat or cap; a piece of headgear or headwear.
- A helmet; a hat used as armour.
- (rare) A circlet or tiara; a ring-shaped piece of headgear.
- (rare) A circle of foam or mist.
- (rare) A area of hilly woodland.
Related terms
- hater
- haterynge
- hatten
- hattere
- ketil-hat
Descendants
- Scots: hat, hatt, hate, hait
- English: hat
- ? Irish: hata
References
- “hat, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-07-18.
Etymology 2
Noun
hat
- Alternative form of hate
North Frisian
Etymology
From Old Frisian hit.
Pronoun
hat
- it
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology 1
From Old Norse hatr, from Proto-Germanic *hataz.
Noun
hat n (definite singular hatet, indefinite plural hat, definite plural hata or hatene)
- hatred, hate
Derived terms
- hatefull
- hater
Related terms
- hate (verb)
Etymology 2
Verb
hat
- imperative of hate
References
- “hat” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /h??t/
Etymology 1
From Old Norse hatr, from Proto-Germanic *hataz. Akin to English hate.
Noun
hat n (definite singular hatet, indefinite plural hat, definite plural hata)
- hatred, hate
Derived terms
- hatar
- hatefull
Etymology 2
Verb
hat
- imperative of hate
References
- “hat” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
Old English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /x??t/, [h??t]
Etymology 1
From Proto-Germanic *haitaz. Cognate with Old Frisian h?t (West Frisian hjit), Old Saxon h?t, Dutch heet, Old High German heiz (German heiß), Old Norse heitr (Swedish het). Cognate to Albanian ethe (“shiver, fiever”), dialectal hethe and ith (“warmth, body heat”), dialectal hith.
Adjective
h?t
- hot, fierce
Declension
Descendants
- Middle English: hot, hoth, whote
- English: hot
- Scots: hat, hait, hate
- Yola: hoat, hote
Etymology 2
From h?tan.
Noun
h?t n
- a promise
Swedish
Etymology
From Old Norse hatr, from Proto-Germanic *hataz.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /h??t/
Noun
hat n (uncountable)
- hatred, haught
Declension
Related terms
- hata
- hatbrott
- judehat
- rashat
Tok Pisin
Etymology 1
From English hat.
Noun
hat
- hat
Etymology 2
From English hard.
Adverb
hat
- hard
Related terms
- hatpela
- hatwok
Turkish
Etymology
Borrowed from Arabic ????? (?a??).
Noun
hat (definite accusative hat?, plural hatlar)
- line
- writing
Declension
Turkmen
Etymology
Borrowed from Arabic ????? (?a??).
Noun
hat (definite accusative haty, plural hatlar)
- letter (written message)
hat From the web:
- what hath god wrought
- what hat size is 23 inches
- what hath god wrought meaning
- what hat size am i
- what hatches from red eggs
- what hath god wrought book
- what hat size is 24 inches
- what hatchery does atwoods use
fisher
English
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?f???/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?f???/
- Homophone: fissure
- Rhymes: -???(r)
Etymology 1
From Middle English fischer, fischare, from Old English fis?ere (“fisher”), from Proto-Germanic *fisk?rijaz (“fisher”), equivalent to fish +? -er. Cognate with Saterland Frisian Fisker (“fisher”), West Frisian fisker (“fisher”), Dutch visser (“fisher”), German Low German Fisker, Fisser (“fisher”), German Fischer (“fisher”), Danish fisker (“fisher”), Swedish fiskare (“fisher”).
Noun
fisher (plural fishers)
- A person who catches fish, especially for a living or for sport.
- A person attempting to catch fish.
Usage notes
Traditionally less common than fisherman, "fisher" is gaining in use as a more gender-inclusive alternative.
Synonyms
- (catcher of wild fish): angler, fisherman, fisherperson, piscary, piscator, piscatorialist, piscatorian, piscicapturist
- (catcher of captive fish): fish farmer, pisciculturist
Hyponyms
- (female): fisheress (rare), fisherwoman, piscatrix
Derived terms
Related terms
- (act): See fishing
- (adj): piscatory, piscatorial, piscatorian, piscatorious
- (adv): piscatorially
- (writing on fishermen): piscatory
Translations
Etymology 2
From French fichet (“polecat pelt”), probably from Dutch visse (“nasty”); modified by folk etymology to resemble Etymology 1.
Noun
fisher (plural fishers)
- A North American marten, Martes pennanti, that has thick brown fur.
- 2003, Cynthia J. Zabel, Robert G. Anthony, Mammal Community Dynamics, page 207,
- The term "forest carnivores" denotes a smaller group of four species - the marten, fisher, lynx, and wolverine - and is only marginally descriptive, inasmuch as it excludes many carnivores that live in forests, and includes the wolverine, which can thrive in the complete absence of trees.
- 2003, Cynthia J. Zabel, Robert G. Anthony, Mammal Community Dynamics, page 207,
- The fur of Martes pennanti.
Synonyms
- (Martes pennanti): pekan, fisher cat, black cat, fisher marten, big marten, black fox
Derived terms
- fisher cat
- fisher marten
Translations
See also
- Fisher (animal) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Martes pennanti on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
- Martes pennanti on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons
Anagrams
- sherif
fisher From the web:
- what fishermen use
- what fisherman died on deadliest catch
- what fishermen use 3 letters
- what fishers eat
- what fisher cat eat
- what fisheries are open near me
- what fisher price swings are recalled
- what fishermen use rearrange letters
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