calf
التعريفات والمعاني
== English ==
=== Pronunciation ===
(Received Pronunciation, Northern England, Wales) enPR: käf, IPA(key): /kɑːf/
(General American, Canada) enPR: kăf, IPA(key): /kæf/
(Australian, New Zealand) IPA(key): /kɐːf/
(Scotland, Ireland) IPA(key): /kaf/
(Wales) IPA(key): /kaːf/
(New York, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Baltimore) IPA(key): /kɛəf/
(dialectal, obsolete) IPA(key): /keɪf/
Rhymes: -ɑːf, -æf
Homophones: caff, calf, kaf, kaph
=== Etymology 1 ===
From Middle English calf, from Anglian Old English cælf, calf (West Saxon ċealf), from Proto-West Germanic *kalb, from Proto-Germanic *kalbaz, further etymology unknown.
==== Noun ====
calf (plural calves or (nonstandard) calfs)
A young cow or bull of any bovid, such as domestic cattle or buffalo.
1917, Knut Hamsun, Growth of the Soil, Book 1, Ch.3, at p.22:
And Goldenhorns calved. A great day in the wilderness, a joy and a delight. They gave her flour-wash, and Isak himself saw to it there was no stint of flour, though he had carried it all the way himself, on his back. And there lay a pretty calf, a beauty, red-flanked like her mother, and comically bewildered at the miracle of coming into the world. In a couple of years she would be having calves of her own.
Leather made of the skin of domestic calves; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding.
1900 Douglas Cockerell: Leather for Bookbinding. Journal of the Society of Arts, March 30 1900, p. 406
We find now, that instead of leather made from sheep, calf, goat, and pig-skins, each having, when finished, its own characteristic surface, that sheepskins are got up to look like calf, morocco, or pigskin; that calf is grained to resemble morocco or so polished and fattened as to have but little character left; while goatskins are grained in any number of ways, and pigskin is often grained like levant morocco. So clever are some of these imitations that it takes a skilled expert to identify a leather when it is on a book. . . I am inclined to consider that calf, as a sound leather, has been manufactured out of existence, for it is unusual to find a 19th century calf binding of more than fifteen years old that does not show signs of decay.
The young of various animals, especially elephant, giraffe, reindeer, seal, or whale (also indiscriminately used of other animals).
A mass of ice broken from a larger glacier, ice shelf, or iceberg.
1915 (published), 1848 (first written), Elisha Kent Kane, Adrift in the Arctic Ice Pack
A small island, near a larger island.
2010 Kate Hawkins Calf of Man. In: Bird Observatories of Britain and Ireland, ed Mike Archer, Mark Grantham, et al. →ISBN (pages unnumbered)
Situated in the north of the Irish Sea and to the south-west of the isle of Man, the Calf of Man is ideally placed on the bird migration routes over the western side of the British Isles. Its importance for migrating and breeding birds had been recognised long before the observatory was established in 1959. . . Visitors can explore the Calf as day visitors or can stay in the hostel accommodation. . .
A cabless railroad engine.
(informal, dated) An awkward or silly boy or young man; any silly person; a dolt.
===== Synonyms =====
bullet (rare); cowlet, cowling; moggy (Midlands, now rare)
===== Derived terms =====
===== Related terms =====
calve
===== Translations =====
==== See also ====
bull
cow
veal
=== Etymology 2 ===
From Middle English calf, kalf, from Old Norse kalfi, possibly derived from the same Germanic root as English calf (“young cow”) (above). Cognate with Icelandic kálfi (“calf of the leg”).
==== Noun ====
calf (plural calves)
(anatomy) The back of the leg below the knee.
The muscle in the back of the leg below the knee.
===== Derived terms =====
===== Translations =====
==== References ====
=== Anagrams ===
CLAF, FLAC
== Middle Dutch ==
=== Etymology ===
From Old Dutch calf, from Proto-Germanic *kalbaz.
=== Noun ===
calf n
calf
==== Inflection ====
==== Descendants ====
Dutch: kalf
Limburgish: kalf
=== Further reading ===
“calf”, in Vroegmiddelnederlands Woordenboek, 2000
Verwijs, E.; Verdam, J. (1885–1929), “calf”, in Middelnederlandsch Woordenboek, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, →ISBN
== Middle English ==
=== Etymology 1 ===
From Anglian Old English calf, cælf (West Saxon ċealf), from Proto-West Germanic *kalb, from Proto-Germanic *kalbaz.
==== Alternative forms ====
calfe, kalf
kealf, kelf (Early Middle English, West Midland); callf (Ormulum)
chalf (East Saxon, Southern, Southwest Midland)
==== Pronunciation ====
IPA(key): /kalf/
IPA(key): /t͡ʃalf/ (East Saxon, Southern, Southwest Midland)
==== Noun ====
calf (plural calvere or calveren or calves)
A calf (young cow)
An image of a calf; something that resembles a calf.
A fawn (young deer)
(rare) Veal; the meat of calves.
===== Descendants =====
English: calf
Middle Scots: calf, cawf
Scots: cauf, cawf, caff, calf
Yola: callef, calef, calluf
===== References =====
“calf, n.(1).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 17 July 2018.
=== Etymology 2 ===
From Old Norse kalfi.
==== Alternative forms ====
calfe
==== Pronunciation ====
IPA(key): /ˈkalf(ə)/
==== Noun ====
calf (plural calves)
calf (part of the leg).
===== Descendants =====
English: calf
Scots: cauf
===== References =====
“calf, n.(2).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 17 July 2018.
== Old Dutch ==
=== Etymology ===
Inherited from Proto-West Germanic *kalb, from Proto-Germanic *kalbaz.
=== Noun ===
calf n
calf
==== Inflection ====
==== Descendants ====
Middle Dutch: calfDutch: kalfLimburgish: kalf
==== Further reading ====
“kalf”, in Oudnederlands Woordenboek, 2012
== Old English ==
=== Pronunciation ===
IPA(key): /kɑlf/, [kɑɫf]
Rhymes: -ɑlf
=== Noun ===
calf n
alternative form of ċealf
== Scots ==
=== Etymology 1 ===
From Middle English calf (“young cow”).
==== Noun ====
calf
alternative form of cauf (“calf (young cow)”)
=== Etymology 2 ===
From Middle English caf, caff, kaf, kaff, alternative forms of chaf.
==== Noun ====
calf
alternative form of caff