different between safe vs keister

safe

English

Etymology

From Middle English sauf, safe, saf, saaf, from Old French sauf, saulf, salf (safe), from Latin salvus (whole, safe), from Proto-Indo-European *solh?- (whole, every).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: s?f, IPA(key): /se?f/
  • Rhymes: -e?f
  • Hyphenation: safe

Adjective

safe (comparative safer or more safe, superlative safest or most safe)

  1. Not in danger; out of harm's reach.
  2. Free from risk.
    Synonyms: riskless, harmless
    Antonyms: harmful, dangerous
  3. Providing protection from danger; providing shelter.
  4. (baseball) When a batter successfully reaches first base, or when a baserunner successfully advances to the next base or returns to the base he last occupied; not out.
  5. Properly secured.
    Synonym: secure
    Hyponyms: binary-safe, fail-safe, thread-safe, type-safe
  6. (used after a noun, often forming a compound) Not susceptible to a specified source of harm.
  7. (Britain, slang) Great, cool, awesome, respectable; a term of approbation, often as interjection.
    Synonyms: wicked, cool; see also Thesaurus:awesome
  8. (slang) Lenient, usually describing a teacher that is easy-going.
    Synonyms: easy-going, merciful, tolerant, lenient
    Antonyms: strict, harsh, intolerant
  9. Reliable; trusty.
    Synonym: trustworthy
  10. Cautious.
  11. (programming) Of a programming language, type-safe or more generally offering well-defined behavior despite programming errors.

Antonyms

  • unsafe

Translations

Noun

safe (plural safes)

  1. A box, usually made of metal, in which valuables can be locked for safekeeping.
  2. (slang) A condom.
    • 1999, Rita Ciresi, Pink Slip, Delta (1999), ?ISBN, page 328:
      She'd better have an arsenal of Trojans in her purse just in case he wasn't carrying a safe in his back pocket.
  3. (dated) A ventilated or refrigerated chest or closet for securing provisions from noxious animals or insects.
  4. (dated, colloquial) A safety bicycle.

Synonyms

  • (box for storing valuables): coffer, lockbox, strongbox
  • (condom): see also Thesaurus:condom.

Hyponyms

  • failsafe

Translations

Verb

safe (third-person singular simple present safes, present participle safing, simple past and past participle safed)

  1. (transitive) To make something safe.

Derived terms

Related terms

  • better safe than sorry
  • Coolgardie safe

See also

  • save
  • safety

References

  • safe on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Further reading

  • safe in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • safe in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • safe at OneLook Dictionary Search

Anagrams

  • EFAs, FAEs, faes

Hausa

Adverb

s?fe

  1. in the morning

Middle English

Adjective

safe

  1. Alternative form of sauf

Preposition

safe

  1. Alternative form of sauf

Conjunction

safe

  1. Alternative form of sauf

Portuguese

Verb

safe

  1. first-person singular (eu) present subjunctive of safar
  2. third-person singular (ele and ela, also used with você and others) present subjunctive of safar
  3. third-person singular (você) affirmative imperative of safar
  4. third-person singular (você) negative imperative of safar

safe From the web:

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  • what safety month is april
  • what safety month is june
  • what safety equipment is required on a kayak
  • what safety training is required by osha
  • what safety devices are required on a boat


keister

English

Alternative forms

  • keester, keyster, kiester

Etymology

Origin uncertain. Originally attested as a criminal cant word for "burglar's tool-box" in 1881. In the 20th century a clutch of criminal slang meanings are mentioned, including "safe, strongbox". "Tripe and keister" had been the phrase for a conman's or a pitchman's display case on a tripod. A likely origin is the word Kiste, which means a box or case, in both German and Yiddish.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -i?st?(r)

Noun

keister (plural keisters)

  1. (slang) The anus or buttocks.
  2. (slang, dated) A safe, a strongbox.
    • 1953, Richard S. Prather, Too many crooks, page 100
      ? " [] The four hundred's yours to take a keister for me. Any cash you find in the box is yours."
      ? "Four hundred, huh? Don't seem like much. Think there'd be anything in the keister?"
  3. (slang) A suitcase; a satchel.
    • 1942, Billboard, 29 Aug 1942 — page 63
      Tripods, keister and loud talk don't make a pitchman any more than do fine feathers make fine birds.
    • 1963, Grace Snyder, Nellie Irene Snyder Yost, No Time on My Hands, page 37
      Sometimes Mama was too busy to make the daily rounds of the draws and pockets, in which case she gave us the keister — an old leather satchel used, in its better days to carry the baby's "didies" in — and sent us to bring in the eggs.

Translations

Verb

keister (third-person singular simple present keisters, present participle keistering, simple past and past participle keistered)

  1. (slang) To conceal something in one's rectum
    Quick, keister this pot before the cops get here.

Anagrams

  • kerites, kiester, strikee

keister From the web:

  • keistered meaning
  • keistering what does it mean
  • what does keister mean in prison
  • what does keister mean in german
  • what do keister mean
  • what does keister stand for
  • what's a keister bunny
  • what does keister in spanish mean
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