divot
English
Etymology
1530s, Scots divot (“turf”), also spelt devat, diffat, and the earliest form (1435), duvat(e), from Scottish Gaelic dubhad, a reduced form of dubh-fhàd, literally “black sod” (compare fàl (“turf, sod”)).[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈdɪvət/, /ˈdɪvɪt/
Audio (US) (file)
Noun
divot (plural divots)
- (especially golf) A torn-up piece of turf, especially by a golf club in making a stroke or by a horse's hoof.
- 1925, F[rancis] Scott Fitzgerald, chapter 8, in The Great Gatsby, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, published 1953, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 155:
- Usually her voice came over the wire as something fresh and cool, as if a divot from a green golf-links had come sailing in at the office window, but this morning it seemed harsh and dry.
- 2007, Lewis Crofts, chapter 1, in The Pornographer of Vienna, London: Old Street, page 4:
- Soon, thick dark tufts of hair began to spread across his scalp, hanging over his ears, a moor of unruly divots which he was first unable to tame and with time willingly cultivated.
- A disruption in an otherwise smooth contour.
- 2004, Aron Ralston, 127 Hours: Between a Rock and a Hard Place, Simon and Schuster, published 2011, page 68:
- In these coldest hours before dawn, from three until six, I take up my knife again and hack at the chockstone. I continue to make minimal but visible progress in the divot.
- (mathematics, astronomy) a drop in a graph between two linear portions (example)
- The space between two pillows.
Derived terms
Translations
piece of turf
Verb
divot (third-person singular simple present divots, present participle divoting, simple past and past participle divoted)
References
- “divot, n.”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, June 2022.
- “divot”, in The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th edition, Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016, →ISBN.
- Fenton, Alexander (1986): The Shape of the Past: Essays in Scottish Ethnology, Volume 2
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