LOB


Meaning of LOB in English

I. ˈläb noun

( -s )

Etymology: probably of Low German or Flemish origin; akin to Flemish lobbe simpleton, Low German lubbe coarse, awkward person, Middle Low German lobbe thick underlip; akin to Old English lobbe, loppe spider, Frisian lob, lobbe hanging mass of fat or flesh, German dialect loppen to be loose, Swedish dialect lubbe plump figure, Old Norse lūfa thick hair — more at slobber

1. now dialect Britain : a dull heavy person : lout

a great fat lob that had no life in him at all — Samuel Lover

2. archaic : a loosely hanging object

3. dialect Britain : a large amount

II. verb

( lobbed ; lobbed ; lobbing ; lobs )

transitive verb

1. archaic : to let hang heavily : droop

their poor jades lob down their heads — Shakespeare

goggling at her grandmother with her mouth lobbed wetly open — Norman Lindsay

2. : to throw, hit, or propel slowly in or as if in a high arc

lobbing hand grenades over the rock — Burtt Evans

as

a. : to return (a tennis ball) in a high arc usually over an opposing player's head

b. : to bowl or throw (a cricket ball) underhand usually slowly

c.

(1) : to throw (a baseball) in a soft easy manner

lob the ball in

(2) : to hit (a baseball) in a slow high arc

lob a few practice flies to the outfield

3. : cob 3

intransitive verb

1. : to move slowly and heavily

rockets … lobbed shoreward — K.M.Dodson

2. : to hit a tennis ball easily in a high arc

3. Australia : to arrive at a place

just lobbed in town — R.M.Daw

III. noun

( -s )

Etymology: lob (II)

1. : a cricket ball bowled or thrown underhand usually slowly

2. : a tennis ball hit slowly in a high arc

IV. noun

also lobb

( -s )

Etymology: origin unknown

1. : a step or stair in a mine

2. : a mineral vein descending like steps

V. noun

( -s )

Etymology: origin unknown

slang Britain : a container for valuables ; especially : till

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.