hood
English
editPronunciation
editEtymology 1
editFrom Middle English hood, hod, from Old English hōd, from Proto-Germanic *hōdaz (cognate with Saterland Frisian Houd, West Frisian/Dutch hoed, German Low German Hood, German Hut). Cognate with Proto-Iranian *xawdaH (“hat”) (compare Avestan 𐬑𐬂𐬛𐬀 (xåda), Old Persian 𐎧𐎢𐎭 (x-u-d /xaudā/)), from Proto-Indo-European *kadʰ- (“to cover”). More at hat.
Noun
edithood (plural hoods)
- A covering for the head, usually attached to a larger garment such as a jacket or cloak.
- (falconry) A head covering placed on falcons to inhibit their vision.
- (equestrianism) A head and neck covering placed on horses to protect against insects and sunlight, to slow coat growth and for warmth.
- Synonym: blinder
- A distinctively coloured fold of material, representing a university degree.
- An enclosure that protects something, especially from above.
- Particular parts of conveyances
- (automotive, chiefly UK) A soft top of a convertible car or carriage.
- (automotive, chiefly US, Canada) The hinged cover over the engine of a motor vehicle, known as a bonnet in other countries.
- (by extension, especially in the phrase "under the hood") A cover over the engine, driving machinery or inner workings of something.
- 2004, D. Michael Abrashoff, Get Your Ship Together: How Great Leaders Inspire Ownership From The Keel Up, Penguin, →ISBN:
- Like many captains, I was just as glad to leave engineering to the engineers. Looking under the ship's hood wasn't what interested me.
- 2015, Max Lucado, Let the Journey Begin: Finding God's Best for Your Life, Thomas Nelson, →ISBN, page 71:
- I never see the pilot percolating coffee or the attendant with a screwdriver under the airplane's hood. Why? Because we all have something we are good at, and we are expected to do that one thing well.
- A metal covering that leads to a vent to suck away smoke or fumes.
- (nautical) One of the endmost planks (or, one of the ends of the planks) in a ship’s bottom at bow or stern, that fits into the rabbet. (These, when fit into the rabbet, resemble a hood (covering).)
- 1830, A Treatise on Marine Architecture, page 260:
- Care must also be taken to place the tenons on the main post so that a stop-water can be driven between it and the fore tenon and the rabbet of the hoods at the keel. The post being dressed to its proper dimensions, the tenons cut, and their ...
- 1874, Samuel James P. Thearle, Naval architecture: a treatise on laying off and building wood, iron, and composite ships. [With] Plates, page 360:
- The fore hoods end at a rabbet cut in the wood stem (see Plate CXVIII.), and the after hoods end at a rabbet prepared in the yellow metal body post. The fore hoods are fastened to the bottom plating as elsewhere; but in the stem they have ...
- 1940, Lauchlan McKay, Richard Cornelius McKay, The Practical hip-builder, page 62:
- But for deep and narrow vessels you must line your hooden-ends wider to get up faster, and consequently the lower ends of the after-hoods will come round, […]
- Various body parts
- (ophiology) An expansion on the sides of the neck typical for many elapids e.g. the Egyptian cobra (Naja haje) and Indian cobra (Naja naja).
- (colloquial) The osseous or cartilaginous marginal extension behind the back of many a dinosaur such as a ceratopsid and reptiles such as Chlamydosaurus kingii.
- Synonym: frill
- 1883, Charles W. De Vis, “Myology of Chlamydosaurus kingii”, in Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales, volume 8, pages 301–302:
- Platysma myoides […] which sends attenuated fibres and slips to the gular region of the hood and is lost dorsad in the fascia covering the trapezius but acquires thickness over the sternum and cervix. Thyromandibularis […] Two distinct muscles may bear this name, an externus and an internus. The latter rises by two slips from about the middle of the inner surface of the mandible and is inserted into the middle of the inner side of the thyrohyal. The greatly elongated thyrobyal passes between the two layers of integument constituting the hood, at its middle fold, and so forms a “yard” to which the lower half of the hood is bent. This inner division of the Thyromandibularis being an adductor of the bone, is the chief agent in lowering the hood and bracing its lower moiety to the side of the neck—it is antagonised by the greater part of the outer division which rises fleshy immediately behind the inner one, but nearly on the lower edge of the jaw, the origin of the mylohyoideus being between them. It immediately divides into two superposed fascicles, the deeper one being inserted into the lower surface of the thyrohyal, a little behind the insertion of the inner division—the other sub division is inserted posteriorly to the former one into the outer side of the bone for the rest of its length and acting thus advantageously is an efficient erector of the lower part of the hood.
- In the human hand, over the extensor digitorum, an expansion of the extensor tendon over the metacarpophalangeal joint (the extensor hood syn. dorsal hood syn. lateral hood)
- (colloquial) The prepuce; the foreskin or clitoral hood.
Derived terms
editTranslations
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See also
edit- cuculliform (hood-shaped)
Verb
edithood (third-person singular simple present hoods, present participle hooding, simple past and past participle hooded)
- (transitive) To cover (something) with a hood.
- Antonym: unhood
- (transitive) To extend out from (something), in the manner of a hood.
- (intransitive, of skin and soft tissue) To grow over the eyelid but not the eye itself.
Derived terms
editTranslations
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Further reading
edit- 2004, George Fletcher Bass, Serçe Limanı: An Eleventh-century Shipwreck, Texas A&M University Press, →ISBN, page 516:
- Hooding ends [Hoods, Hood ends] The ends of planks that fit into the stem and sternpost rabbets.
Etymology 2
editNoun
edithood (plural hoods)
- (slang) Gangster, thug.
- 1968, John McPhee, chapter 7, in The Pine Barrens:
- Teen-age hoods steal cars in cities, take them into the pines, strip them, ignite them, and leave the scene.
Translations
editEtymology 3
editClipping of neighborhood; compare nabe.
Alternative forms
editAdjective
edithood (not comparable)
- Relating to inner-city everyday life, both positive and negative aspects; especially people’s attachment to and love for their neighborhoods.
Translations
editNoun
edithood (plural hoods)
- (African-American Vernacular, slang) Neighborhood.
- What’s goin’ down in the hood?
- 1996, “Stakes is High”, in Stakes Is High, performed by De La Soul:
- Neighborhoods are now hoods cause nobody's neighbors / Just animals surviving with that animal behavior
- (slang) Any poor suburb or neighbourhood.
Usage notes
editParticularly used for poor US inner-city black neighborhoods. Also used more generally, as a casual neutral term for “neighborhood”, but marked by strong associations.
Synonyms
edit- (poor neighborhood, esp. black): ghetto
- (neighborhood): nabe, neighborhood
Derived terms
editTranslations
editEtymology 4
editClipping of hoodie, influenced by existing sense “hoodlum”.
Noun
edithood (plural hoods)
Anagrams
editManx
editPronoun
edithood (emphatic form hoods)
Middle English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom Old English hōd, from Proto-Germanic *hōdaz.
Pronunciation
editNoun
edithood (plural hoodes)
- hood (part of a garment):
- A hood as a symbol of rank (of the church and of guilds).
- A hood made of chain mail used as head armour.
- (rare, Late Middle English) Any sort of protective cloaking or covering.
Derived terms
editDescendants
editReferences
edit- “họ̄d, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-07-12.
North Frisian
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom Old Frisian hāved.
Noun
edithood n (plural (Föhr-Amrum) hööd or (Mooring) hoode)
- (Föhr-Amrum, Mooring) head
- at hood sködle ― to shake one's head
- English 1-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/ʊd
- Rhymes:English/ʊd/1 syllable
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms inherited from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- en:Falconry
- en:Equestrianism
- en:Automotive
- British English
- American English
- Canadian English
- English terms with quotations
- en:Nautical
- en:Animal body parts
- en:Body parts
- English colloquialisms
- English verbs
- English transitive verbs
- English intransitive verbs
- English clippings
- English slang
- English adjectives
- English uncomparable adjectives
- African-American Vernacular English
- English terms with usage examples
- en:Auto parts
- en:Headwear
- Manx non-lemma forms
- Manx prepositional pronouns
- Manx informal terms
- Middle English terms inherited from Old English
- Middle English terms derived from Old English
- Middle English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Middle English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Middle English terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Middle English/oːd
- Rhymes:Middle English/oːd/1 syllable
- Middle English lemmas
- Middle English nouns
- Middle English terms with rare senses
- Late Middle English
- enm:Armor
- enm:Headwear
- enm:Trading
- North Frisian terms inherited from Old Frisian
- North Frisian terms derived from Old Frisian
- North Frisian lemmas
- North Frisian nouns
- North Frisian neuter nouns
- Föhr-Amrum North Frisian
- Mooring North Frisian
- North Frisian terms with usage examples
- frr:Anatomy