tail
English
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle English tail, tayl, teil, from Old English tæġl (“tail”), from Proto-West Germanic *tagl, from Proto-Germanic *taglą (“hair, fiber; hair of a tail”), from Proto-Indo-European *doḱ- (“hair of the tail”), from Proto-Indo-European *deḱ- (“to tear, fray, shred”). Cognate with Scots tail (“tail”), Saterland Frisian Tail (“tail, end”), West Frisian teil (“tail”), Dutch teil (“tail, haulm, blade”), Low German Tagel (“twisted scourge, whip of thongs and ropes; end of a rope”), German Zagel (“tail”), dialectal Danish tavl (“hair of the tail”), Swedish tagel (“hair of the tail, horsehair”), Norwegian tagl (“tail”), Icelandic tagl (“tail, horsetail, ponytail”), Gothic 𐍄𐌰𐌲𐌻 (tagl, “hair”). In some senses, apparently by a generalization of the usual opposition between head and tail.
Noun
tail (plural tails)
- (anatomy) The caudal appendage of an animal that is attached to its posterior and near the anus.
- Most primates have a tail and fangs.
- An object or part of an object resembling a tail in shape, such as the thongs on a cat-o'-nine-tails.
- The back, last, lower, or inferior part of anything.
- The feathers attached to the pygostyle of a bird.
- The tail-end of an object, e.g. the rear of an aircraft's fuselage, containing the tailfin.
- 1611, The Holy Bible, […] (King James Version), London: […] Robert Barker, […], →OCLC, Deuteronomy 28:13:
- And the Lord shall make thee the head, and not the taile, […]
- 1862, Ballou's Dollar Monthly Magazine, volume 16, page 83:
- It was soon over, and the unmoved magistrate calmly ordained that Deborah Williams, Elizabeth and Faith Wilson, should be tied to a cart's tail, and thus led through the principal streets of the town, receiving during their progress twenty lashes each, well laid on, upon the naked back.
- The rear structure of an aircraft, the empennage.
- (astronomy) The visible stream of dust and gases blown from a comet by the solar wind.
- The latter part of a time period or event, or (collectively) persons or objects represented in this part.
- (statistics) The part of a distribution most distant from the mode; as, a long tail.
- One who surreptitiously follows another.
- (cricket) The lower order of batsmen in the batting order, usually specialist bowlers.
- (typography) The lower loop of the letters in the Roman alphabet, as in g, q or y.
- Synonym: descender
- (chiefly in the plural) The side of a coin not bearing the head; normally the side on which the monetary value of the coin is indicated; the reverse.
- (mathematics) All the last terms of a sequence, from some term on.
- A sequence is said to be frequently if every tail of the sequence contains .
- (now colloquial, chiefly US) The buttocks or backside.
- 1499, John Skelton, The Bowge of Courte:
- By Goddis sydes, syns I her thyder broughte, / She hath gote me more money with her tayle / Than hath some shyppe that into Bordews sayle.
- 1603, Michel de Montaigne, chapter 49, in John Florio, transl., The Essayes […], book I, London: […] Val[entine] Simmes for Edward Blount […], →OCLC:
- They were wont to wipe their tailes [translating cul] (this vaine superstition of words must be left unto women) with a sponge, and that's the reason why Spongia in Latine is counted an obscene word […].
- (slang) The penis of a person or animal.
- (slang, uncountable) Sexual intercourse.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:copulation
- I'm gonna get me some tail tonight.
- 1951, J. D. Salinger, chapter 13, in The Catcher in the Rye, Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown and Company, →OCLC:
- “Innarested in a little tail t’night?” “Me?” I said. Which was a very dumb answer, but it’s quite embarrassing when somebody comes right up and asks you a question like that.
- (kayaking) The stern; the back of the kayak.
- A train or company of attendants; a retinue.
- (anatomy) The distal tendon of a muscle.
- (entomology) A filamentous projection on the tornal section of each hind wing of certain butterflies.
- A downy or feathery appendage of certain achens, formed of the permanent elongated style.
- (surgery) A portion of an incision, at its beginning or end, which does not go through the whole thickness of the skin, and is more painful than a complete incision; called also tailing.
- One of the strips at the end of a bandage formed by splitting the bandage one or more times.
- (nautical) A rope spliced to the strap of a block, by which it may be lashed to anything.
- (music) The part of a note which runs perpendicularly upward or downward from the head; the stem.[1]
- (mining) A tailing.
- (architecture) The bottom or lower portion of a member or part such as a slate or tile.
- (colloquial, dated) A tailcoat.
- (electrical engineering) Synonym of pigtail (“a short length of twisted electrical wire”)
Derived terms
- antitail
- astrotail
- at the tail
- bang tail
- bang-tail
- bangtail
- barbtail
- beavertail
- beaver tail
- betail
- bigtail
- bluetail
- boattail
- bobtail
- bonytail
- box tail
- brantail
- bristle-tail
- bristletail
- broadtail
- broken tail
- broomtail
- brown-tail moth
- bucktail
- cat-o'-nine-tails
- cat-o'-nine-tails
- catstail
- cattail
- cat-tail sedge
- chase one's own tail
- chase tail
- cold tail
- comet tail
- cottontail
- cowtail
- cross-tail
- culvertail
- dead tail
- de-tail
- dogstail
- dog's-tail grass
- dovetail
- drabble-tail
- draggle-tail
- dragon's tail
- ducktail
- emutail
- e-tail
- fantail
- fat tail
- fat-tail
- feathertail
- fee tail
- filetail
- firetail
- fishtail
- fish-tail
- fish tail
- flagtail
- flangetail
- flickertail
- flufftail
- forcepstail
- forktail
- foxtail
- freetail
- frozen tail
- fuzztail
- goldentail
- goldtail
- grow a tail
- hairtail
- hangtail
- hardtail
- hare's-tail
- haul tail
- have a tiger by the tail
- have one's tail up
- have the tiger by the tail
- have the world by the tail on a downhill pull
- heads or tails
- head to tail
- heavy tail
- heliotail
- high-tail
- hightail
- high-tail it
- hooktail
- horntail
- horsetail
- horse tail
- in two shakes of a cow's tail
- in two shakes of a dog's tail
- in two shakes of a duck's tail
- in two shakes of a lamb's tail
- jollytail
- kicktail
- lashtail
- lay salt on someone's tail
- like a dog with two tails
- limber tail
- lion's tail
- lizard's tail
- lizard tail
- longtail
- long-tail boat
- long-tail Covid
- looptail
- lyretail
- mackerel sky and mare's-tails make lofty ships carry low sails
- mackerel sky and mare's-tails make tall ships carry low sails
- make head nor tail of
- make head or tail of
- make neither head nor tail of
- mare's-tail
- mare's tail
- mares' tails
- metaltail
- mill tail
- monkey tail
- monkey tail tree
- mousetail
- nail-tail wallaby
- needletail
- nose to tail
- on one's tail
- oxtail
- peacock's tail
- pentail
- petaltail
- petticoat tail
- piece of tail
- pigtail
- pincertail
- pintail
- pin the tail on the donkey
- ploughtail
- plowtail
- plume tail
- ponytail
- pony tail
- pseudotail
- pull the devil by the tail
- put salt on someone's tail
- quaketail
- quilltail
- raccoon tail
- racket-tail
- racquet-tail
- rat-tail
- rat-tail radish
- rat-tail splice
- redtail
- red tail disease
- ribbontail
- ringtail
- ring-tailed
- roostertail
- rooster-tail
- roughtail
- rubytail
- scaletail
- scissorstail
- scissortail
- sharptail
- shavetail
- sheartail
- sheath-tail bat
- shieldtail
- shirt-tail
- shorttail
- silktail
- silvertail
- singletail
- snake tail
- Softail
- softtail
- spadetail
- spatuletail
- spiketail
- spindletail
- spinetail
- split-tail
- spread tail
- sprigtail
- springtail
- squaretail
- squirreltail
- stifftail
- sting in the tail
- streamertail
- stripetail
- stubtail
- swallowtail
- swallow-tail
- swimmer's tail
- swingletail
- swingtail
- swordtail
- tagtail
- tailable
- tailache
- tail away
- tailback
- tailband
- tail-bay
- tail-beam
- tailbeat
- tail between one's legs
- tailblock
- tail block
- tailboard
- tailbone
- tail bone
- tail boom
- tailbud
- tail-buzzer
- tail call
- tailcoat
- tail cone
- tailcord
- tailcuff
- tailcup
- tail dragger
- taildragger
- tail-end
- tailend
- tail end
- tail-ender
- tailer
- taileron
- tail event
- tailfan
- tailfeather
- tailfin
- tail flap
- tailflip
- tailflipping
- Tailgate
- tailgate
- tail grape
- tailgroup
- tail gunner
- tail-gut
- tailgut
- tail gut
- tailhead
- tailhole
- tailhook
- tail in
- tailism
- taillamp, tail lamp
- tailless
- tail lift
- taillight
- taillike
- tail merging
- tailmost
- tail-napkin
- tailnumber
- tail number
- tail-off
- tail off
- tail packing
- tail pad
- tailpiece
- tailpin
- tailpipe
- tailplane
- tail plug
- tail plug
- tail-pod radish
- tail-pole
- tail pole
- tail question
- tailrace
- tail recursion
- tail recursive
- tail rhyme
- tailride
- tail risk
- tail rotor
- tail-shedding
- tailshield
- tailsitter
- tail-skid
- tailskid
- tailslide
- tail slide
- tailspin
- tailspot
- tailstand
- tailstock
- tailstrike
- tailswing
- tail swing
- tail valve
- tail vein
- tail-wagger
- tailward
- tailwards
- tailwater
- tailwheel
- tailwhip
- tailwind
- tail wind
- tailwise
- tapertail
- tapetail
- teeter-tail
- teeth-to-tail ratio
- the cow knows not the worth of its tail till it loses it
- thistletail
- thorntail
- threadtail
- tickle the dragon's tail
- tiger tail
- tigertail
- top and tail
- top to tail
- triple-tail
- tripletail
- trundletail
- trust someone as far as one could fling a bull by the tail
- T-tail
- turkey tail
- turntail
- twintail
- undertail
- veiltail
- wagtail
- wax someone's tail
- wedgetail
- whale's tail
- whale tail
- whiptail
- whitetail
- white-tailed hawk
- wholetail
- wiretail
- work one's tail off
- work someone's tail off
- wrentail
- wrytail
- yellowtail
Related terms
Translations
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
See also
Verb
tail (third-person singular simple present tails, present participle tailing, simple past and past participle tailed)
- (transitive) To follow and observe surreptitiously.
- Tail that car!
- (architecture) To hold by the end; said of a timber when it rests upon a wall or other support; with in or into
- (nautical) To swing with the stern in a certain direction; said of a vessel at anchor.
- This vessel tails downstream.
- To follow or hang to, like a tail; to be attached closely to, as that which can not be evaded.
- 1655, Thomas Fuller, The Church-history of Britain; […], London: […] Iohn Williams […], →OCLC:
- Nevertheless his bond of two thousand pounds, wherewith he was tailed, continued uncancelled.
- To pull or draw by the tail.
- 1662, [Samuel Butler], “[The First Part of Hudibras]”, in Hudibras. The First and Second Parts. […], London: […] John Martyn and Henry Herringman, […], published 1678; republished in A[lfred] R[ayney] Waller, editor, Hudibras: Written in the Time of the Late Wars, Cambridge: University Press, 1905, →OCLC:
- The conqu'ring foe they soon afailid,
First Trulla stav'd, and Cerdon tail'd
Translations
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Etymology 2
From Anglo-Norman, probably from a shortened form of entail.
Noun
tail
- (law) Limitation of inheritance to certain heirs.
- tail male ― limitation to male heirs
- in tail ― subject to such a limitation
Related terms
References
- 1852, John Weeks Moore, Complete Encyclopædia of Music
Middle English
Welsh
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /tai̯l/
- Rhymes: -ai̯l