SHANK


Meaning of SHANK in English

I. noun Etymology: Middle English ~e, from Old English scanca; akin to Old Norse skakkr crooked, Greek skazein to limp Date: before 12th century 1. the part of the leg between the knee and the ankle in humans or the corresponding part in various other vertebrates, leg , a cut of beef, veal, mutton, or lamb from the upper or the lower part of the leg ; shin , a straight narrow usually essential part of an object: as, the straight part of a nail or pin, a straight part of a plant ; stem , stalk , the part of an anchor between the ring and the crown, the part of a fishhook between the eye and the bend, the part of a key between the handle and the bit, the stem of a tobacco pipe or the part between the stem and the bowl, tang 1, h. the narrow part of the sole of a shoe beneath the instep, ~piece , a part of an object by which it can be attached: as, a. a projection on the back of a solid button, a short stem of thread that holds a sewn button away from the cloth, the end (as of a drill bit) that is gripped in a chuck, 4. the latter part of a period of time, the early or main part of a period of time , an often homemade knife, ~ed adjective II. transitive verb Date: 1927 to hit (a golf ball or shot) with the extreme heel of the club so that the ball goes off in an unintended direction

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