PAT


Meaning of PAT in English

I. ˈpat, usu -ad.+V noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English patte, probably of imitative origin

1.

a. : a blow especially with the hand or a flat or blunt instrument

b. : a light blow or tap given to shape or smooth

a few final pats around the newly planted flower

c. : a tap with the hand given in affection or approval

with a quick reassuring pat on her arm, their hostess left — Harriet La Barre

2. : a light tapping sound especially if rhythmical

the pat of bare feet

3. : something (as butter) shaped into a small flat usually square piece and served as an individual portion : dab

4. : a dropping of animal dung

the most satisfactory control measure consists of scattering the cow pats — Eric Hearle

5. : an American Negro dance tune in time with which onlookers often pat their knees or thighs

II. verb

( patted ; patted ; patting ; pats )

transitive verb

1. : to hit with a flat or blunt implement

2.

a. : to flatten, smooth, or put into place or shape with light strokes (as of the hand)

women patted up tortillas by their stalls — G.A.Wagner

b. : to beat or slap lightly

at 70 miles an hour, pontoons pat the waves — Jim Wright

3. : to stroke or tap gently with the hand to soothe, caress, or show approval

had been patted on the head by … the city's founder — Alan Carmichael

intransitive verb

1.

a. : to strike or beat gently

snowflakes were patting against the windowpane — J.B.Clayton

b. : to tap lightly and quickly with the soles of the feet (as in dancing a jig)

2. : to walk or run so as to make a light beating sound

in summer she patted away to school — Hamlin Garland

3. dialect : to keep time to dance music by patting the knee or thigh

- pat juba

- pat on the back

III. adverb

: in a pat manner : aptly , readily , promptly

IV. adjective

1.

a. : exactly suited to the purpose or occasion : apt , opportune

this pat tale got a big laugh — Dorothy Barclay

b. : too exactly suitable : contrived , facile , glib

his characters flatten out, and his conclusions become annoyingly pat — Nicolas Monjo

2. : learned, mastered, or memorized exactly or with ready or fluent command

didn't say that prayer over twice before he had it pat — H.G.Wells

3. : firm , unyielding — usually used in the phrase to stand pat

a major issue on which it has stood pat since the matter first arose — Sydney (Australia) Bulletin

Synonyms: see seasonable

V. noun

( -s )

Usage: usually capitalized

Etymology: from Pat, nickname for Patrick, a common Irish Christian name

1. : irishman

2. Australia : chinese

VI. abbreviation

1. patent; patented

2. patrol

3. pattern

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