PUNT


Meaning of PUNT in English

I. ˈpənt noun

( -s )

Etymology: from (assumed) Middle English, from Old English, from Latin ponton-, ponto floating bridge, punt — more at pontoon

1.

a. : a long narrow flat-bottomed boat with square ends usually propelled with a pole

b. : a flat-bottomed boat especially of broad beam

2. : kick 8

many bottles … have a concave bottom, or punt , to give added strength — O.A.Mendelsohn

II. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

transitive verb

1. : to propel (as a punt) by pushing with a pole against the bottom

2. : to convey in a punt

intransitive verb

: to boat or hunt in a punt

III. noun

( -s )

Etymology: French or Spanish; French ponte, from Spanish punto point, from Latin punctum — more at point

1. : a point in some games of chance (as basset)

2. : punter I a

3. : a play made against the banker (as in faro)

IV. intransitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: French ponter, from ponte

1. : to play at a gambling game against the banker

2. Britain : gamble , bet

in the baccarat room, punting — Max Beerbohm

arguing horses in the morning, punting on them by phone and radio during … afternoon — Leslie Rees

V. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: origin unknown

transitive verb

: to kick (a ball) in football, soccer, or rugby before the ball dropped from the hands hits the ground

intransitive verb

: to punt a ball

unable to advance after receiving the kickoff and punted — New York Times

VI. noun

( -s )

1. : the act or an instance of punting a ball: as

a. : a kick used by the goalkeeper in soccer to clear the ball

b. : a kick in football made especially on fourth down to gain ground when relinquishing possession of the ball

2. : a punted ball

returned a punt 67 yards for a touchdown — New York Times

VII. ˈpu̇nt noun

( plural punt or punts )

Etymology: Irish Gaelic, literally, pound (weight or money), from English pound

: the monetary pound of Ireland

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