puck
See also: Puck
English
Pronunciation
- enPR: pŭk, IPA(key): /pʌk/
Audio (Southern England) (file) - Rhymes: -ʌk
Etymology 1
From Middle English pouke, from Old English pūca (“goblin, demon”), from Proto-West Germanic *pūkō, from Proto-Germanic *pūkô (“a goblin, spook”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)pāug(')- (“brilliance, spectre”).
Cognate with Old Norse púki (“devil”) (dialectal Swedish puke), Middle Low German spōk, spūk (“apparition, ghost”), German Spuk (“a haunting”). Doublet of pooka. More at spook.
Noun
puck (plural pucks)
- (now rare) A mischievous or hostile spirit. [from 10th c.]
- 2017, Ronald Hutton, The Witch, Yale University Press, published 2018, page 232:
- William Tyndale allotted this character a role, of leading nocturnal travellers astray as the puck had been said to do since Anglo-Saxon times and the goblin since the later medieval period.
Derived terms
Verb
puck (third-person singular simple present pucks, present participle pucking, simple past and past participle pucked)
Noun
puck (plural pucks)
- (ice hockey) A hard rubber disc; any other flat disc meant to be hit across a flat surface in a game. [from 19th c.]
- 1886 February 28, Boston Daily Globe, page 2:
- In hockey a flat piece of rubber, say four inches long by three wide and about an inch thick, called a ‘puck’, is used.
- 1981, William Irwin Thompson, The Time Falling Bodies Take to Light: Mythology, Sexuality and the Origins of Culture, London: Rider/Hutchinson & Co., page 184:
- The game itself, though played by men, was probably meant to enact a mediation of the opposites of male and female, with a circular puck being the feminine symbol and the phallic hockey stick being the masculine symbol.
- (chiefly Canada) An object shaped like a puck. [from 20th c.]
- 2004, Art Directors Annual, volume 83, Rotovision, page 142:
- He reaches into the urinal and picks up the puck. He then walk over to the sink and replaces a bar of soap with the urinal puck.
- (computing) A pointing device with a crosshair. [from 20th c.]
- (hurling, camogie) A penalty shot.
Derived terms
Terms derived from puck
- hockey puck
- puck bunny
- puck carrier
- puck chaser
- puck chasing
- puck crown
- puck-dribbling
- puck-handler
- puck-handling
- puck palace
- puck-pusher
- puck sense
- puck-shy
- puckster
- rag the puck
- side puck
- where the puck is heading, where the puck is going
Translations
hockey puck — see hockey puck
See also
- Hockey puck on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Noun
puck (plural pucks)
- (trampoline, gymnastics) A body position between the pike and tuck positions, with knees slightly bent and folded in; open tuck.
Swedish
Declension
Declension of puck | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |||
Indefinite | Definite | Indefinite | Definite | |
Nominative | puck | pucken | puckar | puckarna |
Genitive | pucks | puckens | puckars | puckarnas |
Idioms
All are colloquial.
- lugna puckar (“calm, under control”, literally “calm pucks”)
- raka puckar (“direct, blunt (compare English straight shooter)”, literally “straight pucks”)
- snabba puckar (“fast-paced”, literally “quick pucks”)
Further reading
- puck in Svensk ordbok.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.