different between shank vs hilt

shank

English

Etymology

From Middle English schanke, from Old English s?anca (leg), from Proto-West Germanic *skank?, from Proto-Germanic *skankô (compare West Frisian skonk, Low German Schanke, German Schenkel (shank, leg), Norwegian skank), from *skankaz (compare Old Norse skakkr (wry, crooked)), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)keng- (compare Middle Irish scingim (I spring), Ancient Greek ????? (skáz?, to limp).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?æ?k/
  • Rhymes: -æ?k

Noun

shank (plural shanks)

  1. The part of the leg between the knee and the ankle.
  2. Meat from that part of an animal.
  3. (ornithology, colloquial) A redshank or greenshank, various species of Old World wading birds in the genus Tringa having distinctly colored legs.
  4. A straight, narrow part of an object, such as a key or an anchor; shaft; stem.
  5. The handle of a pair of shears, connecting the ride to the neck.
  6. The center part of a fishhook between the eye and the hook, the 'hook' being the curved part that bends toward the point.
  7. A protruding part of an object, by which it is or can be attached.
  8. The metal part on a curb bit that falls below the mouthpiece, which length controls the severity of the leverage action of the bit, and to which the reins of the bridle are attached.
  9. (sports) A poorly played golf shot in which the ball is struck by the part of the club head that connects to the shaft.
  10. (slang) An improvised stabbing weapon; a shiv.
  11. A loop forming an eye to a button.
  12. (architecture) The space between two channels of the Doric triglyph.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Gwilt to this entry?)
  13. (metalworking) A large ladle for molten metal, fitted with long bars for handling it.
  14. (printing, dated) The body of a type; between the shoulder and the foot.
  15. (shoemaking) The part of the sole beneath the instep connecting the broader front part with the heel.
  16. Flat-nosed pliers, used by opticians for nipping off the edges of pieces of glass to make them round.
  17. The end or remainder, particularly of a period of time.
  18. The main part or beginning of a period of time.

Synonyms

(improvised stabbing weapon): shiv (slang)

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

shank (third-person singular simple present shanks, present participle shanking, simple past and past participle shanked)

  1. (archaic, Ulster) To travel on foot.
  2. (slang) To stab, especially with an improvised blade.
  3. (slang) To remove another's trousers, especially in jest; to depants.
  4. (transitive, golf) To misstrike the ball with the part of the club head that connects to the shaft.
  5. (transitive, chiefly tennis, soccer, gridiron football) To hit or kick the ball in an unintended direction.
  6. (intransitive) To fall off, as a leaf, flower, or capsule, on account of disease affecting the supporting footstalk; usually followed by off.
    • 1861, Charles Darwin, Cause of the variation of flowers
      the gerrnens of these swelled, and on four out of the six I have now got fine pods, above 1% inch in length, with the seeds externally visible; whereas the flower stalks of the many other flowers all shanked off.
  7. (transitive, sewing) To provide (a button) with a shank (loop forming an eye).
    • 2000, The Indian Textile Journal (volume 110, issues 7-12)
      The system is suitable for shanking all kind of sewn buttons (jackets, coats, blouses, shirts, trousers).
  8. (shoemaking) To apply the shank to a shoe, during the process of manufacturing it.
    • 1986 March 6, "Factory Work" [Poetry, 147], quoted in 2009, Deborah Boe, The Girl of the Early Race: Poems, Gegensatz Press (?ISBN):
      I take those metal shanks, slide the backs of them in glue and make them lie down on the shoe-bottoms, [] Last week they ran a contest to see which shankers shanked fastest. I'm not embarrassed to say I beat them all.

Synonyms

(to stab with an improvised weapon): shiv (slang)
(to remove another's pants): depants (slang)

Adjective

shank (comparative shanker, superlative shankest)

  1. (slang) Bad.

See also

  • shank it
  • (poorly played golf shot): thin, fat, toe

Anagrams

  • Hanks, Naskh, ankhs, hanks, khans

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hilt

English

Etymology

From Middle English hilt, hilte, from Old English hilt, hilte, from Proto-Germanic *helt?, *helt?, *helt?, *hiltij?, (compare Old Norse hjalt, Old High German helza, Old Saxon helta), from Proto-Indo-European *kel- (to strike, cut) (see holt).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /h?lt/
  • Rhymes: -?lt

Noun

hilt (plural hilts)

  1. The handle of a sword, consisting of grip, guard, and pommel, designed to facilitate use of the blade and afford protection to the hand.
    Synonym: haft
    Meronyms: grip, guard, crossguard, quillons, pommel
    Holonym: sword
    • 2009, James Drewe, Tàijí Jiàn 32-Posture Sword Form, Singing Dragon (?ISBN)
      A partial tang does not extend all the way through the hilt and is normally not more than half the width of the blade. The length of the tang and the width, particularly where it narrows before entering the pommel, vary from sword to sword.
  2. The base of the penis.

Derived terms

  • to the hilt

Translations

Verb

hilt (third-person singular simple present hilts, present participle hilting, simple past and past participle hilted)

  1. (transitive) To provide with a hilt.
  2. (transitive) To insert (a bodily extremity) as far as it can go into a sexual orifice so that it is impeded by the wider base to which it is attached (finger until palm, penis until pelvis).
    • 2015 Kitsune page 41
      his fingers hilted inside
    • 2017 Hot Wife's Secret Sex Life page 25
      He hilted himself inside her.

Anagrams

  • -lith, Lith., lith, lith-

Middle English

Noun

hilt (plural hiltes)

  1. Alternative form of hilte (hilt)

Verb

hilt

  1. Alternative form of hiled: past participle of hilen (to cover)

hilt From the web:

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