horn
verb
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L331935 on Wikidata ↗noun
- material
- generic name for many musical instruments
- anatomical feature
- diacritical mark
- type of brass instrument made of tubing wrapped into a coil with a flared bell
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /hɔːn/ / /hɔɹn/ / /ˈhɑːɹˠn/
name
- A surname.
- A former civil parish in Rutland, England, abolished in 2016 on the formation of Exton and Horn parish.
- An unincorporated community in Dawes County, Nebraska, United States.
noun
Etymology: From Middle English horn, horne, from Old English horn, from Proto-West Germanic *horn, from Proto-Germanic *hurną. Compare West Frisian hoarn, Dutch hoorn, Low German Hoorn, horn, German Horn, Danish and Swedish horn, Gothic 𐌷𐌰𐌿𐍂𐌽 (haurn). Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ḱr̥h₂-nó-m, from *ḱerh₂- (“head, horn”). Compare Breton kern (“horn”), Latin cornū, Ancient Greek κέρας (kéras), Proto-Slavic *sьrna, Old Church Slavonic сьрна (sĭrna, “roedeer”), Hittite [script needed] (surna, “horn”), Persian سر (sar), Sanskrit शृङ्ग (śṛṅga, “horn”). Doublet of corn (“callus”), corno, and cornu. (telephone): From the horn-shaped earpieces of old communication systems that used air tubes.
- A hard growth of keratin that protrudes from the top of the head of certain animals, usually paired.
- Any similar real or imaginary growth or projection such as the elongated tusk of a narwhal, the eyestalk of a snail, the pointed growth on the nose of a rhinoceros, or the hornlike projection on the head of a demon or similar.
- An antler.
- The hard substance from which animals' horns are made, sometimes used by man as a material for making various objects.
“an umbrella with a handle made of horn”
- A vessel made from a horn, to contain drink, ink, gunpowder, etc.
“horns of mead and ale”
“The one brought out a filled up horn.”
- An object whose shape resembles a horn, such as cornucopia or the point of an anvil.
“[W]hile riſing ſlow, / Blank, in the leaden-colour'd eaſt, the moon / Wears a wan circle round her blunted horns.”
- An object whose shape resembles a horn, such as cornucopia or the point of an anvil.
- An object whose shape resembles a horn, such as cornucopia or the point of an anvil.
- An object whose shape resembles a horn, such as cornucopia or the point of an anvil.
- An object whose shape resembles a horn, such as cornucopia or the point of an anvil.
- An object whose shape resembles a horn, such as cornucopia or the point of an anvil.
“Joab […] caught hold on the horns of the altar”
- Any of several musical wind instruments.
- An instrument resembling a musical horn and used to signal others.
“hunting horn”
- A loud alarm, especially one on a motor vehicle.
- A sound signaling the expiration of time.
“The shot was after the horn and therefore did not count.”
- A conical device used to direct waves.
“antenna horn”
“loudspeaker horn”
- Generally, any brass wind instrument.
- A telephone.
“Get him on the horn so that we can have a discussion about this.”
- An erection of the penis.
- A peninsula or projecting tract of land.
“to navigate around the horn”
“But nowhere are there queerer waters than in our own parish of Caulds, at the place called the Sker Bay, where between two horns of land a shallow estuary receives the stream of the Sker.”
- A diacritical mark that may be attached to the top right corner of the letters o and u when writing in Vietnamese, thus forming ơ and ư.
- An incurved, tapering and pointed appendage found in the flowers of the milkweed (Asclepias).
- In naval mine warfare, a projection from the mine shell of some contact mines which, when broken or bent by contact, causes the mine to fire.
verb
Etymology: From Middle English horn, horne, from Old English horn, from Proto-West Germanic *horn, from Proto-Germanic *hurną. Compare West Frisian hoarn, Dutch hoorn, Low German Hoorn, horn, German Horn, Danish and Swedish horn, Gothic 𐌷𐌰𐌿𐍂𐌽 (haurn). Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ḱr̥h₂-nó-m, from *ḱerh₂- (“head, horn”). Compare Breton kern (“horn”), Latin cornū, Ancient Greek κέρας (kéras), Proto-Slavic *sьrna, Old Church Slavonic сьрна (sĭrna, “roedeer”), Hittite [script needed] (surna, “horn”), Persian سر (sar), Sanskrit शृङ्ग (śṛṅga, “horn”). Doublet of corn (“callus”), corno, and cornu. (telephone): From the horn-shaped earpieces of old communication systems that used air tubes.
- Of an animal, to assault with the horns.
- To furnish with horns.
- To cuckold.
- To sound the horn of a motor vehicle; to honk.
“, His Precious Gem He horned five times but the man didn't moved his car away.”