catcher
noun
- defensive position in baseball and softball played behind home plate, facing the field
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈkæt͡ʃə/ / /ˈkæt͡ʃəɹ/ / /ˈkɛt͡ʃ-/
noun
Etymology: Etymology tree Vulgar Latin captus Proto-Indo-European *-yetider. Vulgar Latin -io Vulgar Latin *captiāre Old French chacierbor. Anglo-Norman cachierbor. Middle English cacchen English catch Proto-Indo-European *-yósder. Proto-Italic *-āzijos Latin -āriusnom. Latin -āriusbor. Proto-Germanic *-ārijaz Proto-West Germanic *-ārī Old English -ere Middle English -ere English -er English catcher From catch + -er.
- Someone or something that catches.
- The player who squats behind home plate and receives the pitches from the pitcher.
“Finding Dempsey in my mind's eye in January was not quite startling, ...but some other catchers turned up in my hot-stove reveries as well. Bob Boone, for instance.”
“A “pitchometer” was installed on the scoreboard to time the pitchers. According the baseball rules a pitcher had to throw a pitch within 20 seconds after he received the ball from the catcher when there was nobody on base.”
- The bottom partner in a homosexual relationship or sexual encounter between two men.
- A wrestler.
- The webbed glove that the goaltender wears on the hand opposite the hand that holds the stick.
- Short for mailcatcher (“device for a moving train to pick up mail”)