glove
English
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Etymology
From Middle English glove, glofe, from Old English glōf, *glōfe, *glōfa, ("glove"; weak forms attested only in plural form glōfan (“gloves”)), from Proto-Germanic *galōfô (“glove”), from Proto-Germanic *ga- (“collective and associative prefix”) + Proto-Germanic *lōfô (“flat of the hand, palm”), from Proto-Indo-European *lāp-, *lēp-, *lep- (“flat”). Cognate with Scots gluve, gluive (“glove”), Icelandic glófi (“glove”). Related to Middle English lofe, lufe (“palm of the hand”). More at loof.
Pronunciation
- enPR: glŭv, IPA(key): /ɡlʌv/
Audio (US) (file) Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -ʌv
Noun
glove (plural gloves)
- An item of clothing, covering all or part of the hand and fingers, but usually allowing independent movement of the fingers.
- I wore gloves to keep my hands warm.
- The boxing champ laced on his gloves before the big bout.
- A baseball mitt.
- (baseball, figuratively) The ability to catch a hit ball.
- Frederico had a great glove, but he couldn't hit a curveball, so he never broke into the pros.
- (slang) A condom.
- (with definite article) A challenge from one to another.
- to throw down the glove, i.e. to offer a challenge; to take up the glove, to accept it
Translations
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Verb
glove (third-person singular simple present gloves, present participle gloving, simple past and past participle gloved)
- (baseball, transitive) To catch the ball in a baseball mitt.
- He gloved the line drive for the third out.
- (transitive) To put a glove or gloves on.
- Maxwell gloved his hand so that he wouldn't leave fingerprints, then pulled the trigger.
- 2004, David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas, London: Hodder and Stoughton, →ISBN:
- After the maids had hatted and gloved the girls, the carriage was summoned and I was carted around one church after another.
- (cricket) To touch a delivery with one's glove while the gloved hand is on the bat. Under the rules of cricket, the batsman is deemed to have hit the ball.
Derived terms
- baseball glove
- batting glove
- boxing glove
- data glove
- deglove
- driving glove
- drop the gloves
- evening glove
- fingerless glove
- fit like a glove
- fox-glove
- gardening glove
- given the glove
- glove box
- glove compartment
- gloved
- glove doll
- glove money
- glove puppet
- glove sponge
- glove up
- glovey
- glovish
- half glove
- hand and glove
- handglove
- hand-in-glove
- hand in glove
- iron fist in a velvet glove
- kid glove
- kid-glove
- kid gloves
- lay a glove on
- love glove
- mermaid's glove
- Mickey Mouse glove
- monkey glove
- mousquetaire glove
- no glove no love
- opera glove
- oven glove
- riding glove
- surgical glove
- take up the glove
- the gloves are off
- vampire glove
- velvet glove
- white-glove
- white-glove service
- white glove test
- white-glove test
- work glove
Middle English
Etymology
Inherited from Old English *glōfa (variant of glōf), from Proto-West Germanic *glōfō, from Proto-Germanic *galōfô; equivalent to y- + love (“palm”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɡloːv(ə)/
Noun
glove (plural gloves or gloven)
- A glove or gauntlet (hand covering)
- A glove as a token of feudal allegiance.
- A glove or gauntlet in various symbolic uses:
- Signifying assent, agreement, or the marital compact.
- Signifying entry into combat.
- Signifying worthlessness or unimportance.
References
- “glọ̄ve, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.