TRAP


Meaning of TRAP in English

I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old English treppe & Anglo-French ~e (of Germanic origin); akin to Middle Dutch ~pe ~, stair, Old English treppan to tread Date: before 12th century a device for taking game or other animals, 2. something by which one is caught or stopped unawares, a football play in which a defensive player is allowed to cross the line of scrimmage and then is blocked from the side while the ballcarrier advances through the spot vacated by the defensive player, the act or an instance of ~ping the ball in soccer, a defensive maneuver in basketball in which two defenders converge quickly on the ball handler to steal the ball or force a bad pass, 3. a device for hurling clay pigeons into the air, sand ~ , a piece of leather or section of interwoven leather s~s between the thumb and index finger of a baseball glove that forms an extension of the pocket, mouth , a light usually one-horse carriage with springs, any of various devices for preventing passage of something often while allowing other matter to proceed, a group of percussion instruments (as a bass drum, snare drums, and cymbals) used especially in a dance or jazz band, an arrangement of rock strata that favors the accumulation of oil and gas, a measured stretch of a course over which electronic timing devices measure the speed of a vehicle (as a racing car or dragster), II. verb (~ped; ~ping) Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. to catch or take in or as if in a ~ ; en~ , to place in a restricted position ; confine , to provide or set (a place) with ~s, 3. stop , hold , to separate out (as water from steam), 4. to catch (as a baseball) immediately after a bounce, to block out (a defensive football player) by means of a ~, to stop and gain control of (a soccer ball) with a part of the body other than the hands or arms, intransitive verb to engage in ~ping animals (as for furs), to make a defensive ~ in basketball, see: catch ~per noun III. transitive verb (~ped; ~ping) Etymology: Middle English ~pen, from ~pe caparison, from Anglo-French ~e, probably from Medieval Latin ~us cloth, by-form of Late Latin drappus Date: 14th century to adorn with or as if with ~pings, IV. noun Etymology: Swedish ~p, from ~pa stair, from Middle Low German ~pe; akin to Middle Dutch ~pe stair Date: 1794 ~rock

Merriam Webster. Explanatory English dictionary Merriam Webster.      Толковый словарь английского языка Мерриам-Уэбстер.