hood

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Pronunciation === IPA(key): /hʊd/ (General American) IPA(key): [hʊ̈d], [hɪ̈d] Rhymes: -ʊd === Etymology 1 === From Middle English hood, hod, from Old English hōd, from Proto-West Germanic *hōd, from Old English hōd, from Proto-Germanic *hōdaz, from Proto-Indo-European *kadʰ- (“to cover”). See also Saterland Frisian Houd (“hat; hood”), West Frisian/Dutch hoed (“hat”), Cimbrian huat, huut (“hat”), German Hut (“hat”), German Low German Hood (“hat; hood”), Luxembourgish Hutt (“hat”); also Proto-Iranian *xawdaH (“hat”) (Avestan 𐬑𐬂𐬛𐬀 (xåda), Old Persian 𐎧𐎢𐎭 (x-u-d /⁠xaudā⁠/)). More at hat. ==== Noun ==== hood (plural hoods) A covering for the head, usually attached to a larger garment such as a jacket or cloak. (falconry) A head covering placed on falcons to inhibit their vision. (equestrianism) A head and neck covering placed on horses to protect against insects and sunlight, to slow coat growth and for warmth. Synonym: blinder A distinctively colored fold of material, representing a university degree. An enclosure that protects something, especially from above. Particular parts of conveyances (automotive, chiefly UK) A soft top of a convertible car or carriage. (automotive, chiefly US, Canada) The hinged cover over the engine of a motor vehicle, known as a bonnet in other countries. Synonyms: cowl, bonnet (by extension, especially in the phrase "under the hood") A cover over the engine, driving machinery or inner workings of something. A metal covering that leads to a vent to suck away smoke or fumes. (nautical) One of the endmost planks (or, one of the ends of the planks) in a ship’s bottom at bow or stern, that fits into the rabbet. (These, when fit into the rabbet, resemble a hood (covering).) Various body parts (ophiology) An expansion on the sides of the neck typical for many elapids e.g. the Egyptian cobra (Naja haje) and Indian cobra (Naja naja). (colloquial) The osseous or cartilaginous marginal extension behind the back of many a dinosaur such as a ceratopsid and reptiles such as Chlamydosaurus kingii. Synonym: frill In the human hand, over the extensor digitorum, an expansion of the extensor tendon over the metacarpophalangeal joint (the extensor hood syn. dorsal hood syn. lateral hood) (colloquial) The prepuce; the foreskin or clitoral hood. ===== Derived terms ===== ===== Translations ===== ===== See also ===== cuculliform (hood-shaped) ==== Verb ==== hood (third-person singular simple present hoods, present participle hooding, simple past and past participle hooded) (transitive) To cover (something) with a hood. Antonym: unhood (transitive) To extend out from (something), in the manner of a hood. (intransitive, of skin and soft tissue) To grow over the eyelid but not the eye itself. ===== Derived terms ===== ===== Translations ===== ==== Further reading ==== === Etymology 2 === Clipping of hoodlum. ==== Noun ==== hood (plural hoods) (slang) Gangster, thug. ===== Translations ===== === Etymology 3 === Clipping of neighborhood; compare nabe. ==== Alternative forms ==== 'hood ==== Adjective ==== hood (not comparable) Relating to inner-city everyday life, both positive and negative aspects; especially people’s attachment to and love for their neighborhoods. ===== Translations ===== ==== Noun ==== hood (plural hoods) (African-American Vernacular, slang) A neighborhood. (slang) Any poor suburb or neighbourhood. Synonyms: (offensive) ghetto, (vulgar) shithole ===== Usage notes ===== Particularly used for poor US inner-city black neighborhoods. Also used more generally, as a casual neutral term for neighborhood, but marked by strong associations. ===== Synonyms ===== (poor neighborhood, esp. black): ghetto (neighborhood): nabe, neighborhood ===== Derived terms ===== ===== Translations ===== === Etymology 4 === Clipping of hoodie, influenced by existing sense “hoodlum”. ==== Noun ==== hood (plural hoods) (UK) Person wearing a hoodie. === Anagrams === Hodo, hodo- == Manx == === Pronoun === hood (emphatic form hoods) (informal) second-person singular of hug to you == Middle English == === Alternative forms === hode, hod, hude, hudde, hoode === Etymology === From Old English hōd. === Pronunciation === IPA(key): /hoːd/ Rhymes: -oːd === Noun === hood (plural hoodes) hood (part of a garment): A hood as a symbol of rank (of the church and of guilds). A hood made of chain mail used as head armour. (rare, Late Middle English) Any sort of protective cloaking or covering. ==== Derived terms ==== hoden hoder hodles hodynge ==== Descendants ==== English: hood Scots: hude, huid ==== References ==== “họ̄d, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 12 July 2018. == North Frisian == === Alternative forms === Haur (Sylt) === Etymology === From Old Frisian hāved. === Noun === hood n (plural (Föhr-Amrum) hööd or (Mooring) hoode) (Föhr-Amrum, Mooring) head at hood sködle ― to shake one's head