catcher

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See also: Catcher and cátcher

English

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Etymology

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From catch +‎ -er.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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catcher (plural catchers)

  1. Someone or something that catches.
  2. (baseball) The player that squats behind home plate and receives the pitches from the pitcher.
    • 1989 February 13, Roger Angell, Season Ticket: A Baseball Companion, Ballantine Books, page 22:
      Finding Dempsey in my mind's eye in January was not quite startling, ...but some other catchers turned up in my hot-stove reveries as well. Bob Boone, for instance.
    • 2003, John E. Peterson, The Kansas City Athletics: A Baseball History: 1954–1967, Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, →ISBN, page 210:
      A “pitchometer” was installed on the scoreboard to time the pitchers. According the baseball rules a pitcher had to throw a pitch within 20 seconds after he received the ball from the catcher when there was nobody on base.
    • 2021, University of the District of Columbia, “The plate umpire may suspend play because of darkness”, in Course Hero:
      At the plate the catcher is responsible for catching pitches, keeping mispitched balls in front of the plate, calling pitches that are normally done through hand signals, picking off runners, and they are considered the leaders of the field.
  3. (chiefly US, colloquial) The bottom partner in a homosexual relationship or sexual encounter between two men.
    Synonym: bottom
  4. (archaic) A wrestler.

Coordinate terms

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Derived terms

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Translations

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Anagrams

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French

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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catcher

  1. to wrestle
  2. (Quebec) to catch
  3. (Quebec) to catch, get (understand fully)
    T’as ben catché?
    Ya got it?

Conjugation

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Anagrams

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Spanish

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Noun

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catcher m (plural catchers)

  1. (baseball) catcher