SPEARS

Noun

spears

plural of spear

Verb

spears

Third-person singular simple present indicative form of spear

Anagrams

• Aspers, Speras, aspers, parses, passer, prases, presas, repass, sarpes, spares, sparse, spaser

Etymology

Proper noun

Spears

An English surname.

Anagrams

• Aspers, Speras, aspers, parses, passer, prases, presas, repass, sarpes, spares, sparse, spaser

Source: Wiktionary


SPEAR

Spear, n. Etym: [OE. spere, AS. spere; akin to D. & G. speer, OS. & OHS. sper, Icel. spjör, pl., Dan. spær, L. sparus.]

1. A long, pointed weapon, used in war and hunting, by thrusting or throwing; a weapon with a long shaft and a sharp head or blade; a lance.

Note: [See Illust. of Spearhead.] "A sharp ground spear." Chaucer. They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks. Micah iv. 3.

2. Fig.: A spearman. Sir W. Scott.

3. A sharp-pointed instrument with barbs, used for stabbing fish and other animals.

4. A shoot, as of grass; a spire.

5. The feather of a horse. See Feather, n., 4.

6. The rod to which the bucket, or plunger, of a pump is attached; a pump rod. Spear foot, the off hind foot of a horse.

– Spear grass. (Bot.) (a) The common reed. See Reed, n., 1. (b) meadow grass. See under Meadow.

– Spear hand, the hand in which a horseman holds a spear; the right hand. Crabb.

– Spear side, the male line of a family. Lowell.

– Spear thistle (Bot.), the common thistle (Cnicus lanceolatus).

Spear, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Speared; p. pr. & vb. n. Spearing.]

Definition: To pierce with a spear; to kill with a spear; as, to spear a fish.

Spear, v. i.

Definition: To shoot into a long stem, as some plants. See Spire. Mortimer.

Source: Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition



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Word of the Day

25 December 2024

UNAMBIGUOUS

(adjective) having or exhibiting a single clearly defined meaning; “As a horror, apartheid...is absolutely unambiguous”- Mario Vargas Llosa


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Coffee Trivia

Some 16th-century Italian clergymen tried to ban coffee because they believed it to be “satanic.” However, Pope Clement VII loved coffee so much that he lifted the ban and had coffee baptized in 1600.

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