noose
Plural: nooses
Noun
- a trap for birds or small mammals; often has a slip noose
- a loop formed in a cord or rope by means of a slipknot; it binds tighter as the cord or rope is pulled
- An adjustable loop of rope, such as the one placed around the neck in hangings, or the one at the end of a lasso.
Verb
- make a noose in or of
- secure with a noose
- To tie or catch in a noose; to entrap or ensnare.
- NOOSED, NOOSING, NOOSES to secure with a type of loop
Examples
- "Put someone's head in a noose"
Origin / Etymology
From Middle English nose (“noose, loop”), of unclear origin.
Possibly from Old French nos or Old Occitan nous, nos, nominative singular or accusative plural of nou (“knot”), with a required change in meaning shifting from the "knot" itself to the "loop" created by the knot. If so, then cognate with French nœud (“knot”), Portuguese nó (“knot”) and Spanish nudo (“knot”). Compare node and knot.
Alternatively, and perhaps more likely, borrowed from Middle Low German nȫse (“loop, noose, snare”), itself of obscure origin. Perhaps derived from an incorrect division of ēn' ȫse (literally “a loop”), from Middle Low German ȫse, from Old Saxon *ōsia, from Proto-West Germanic *ansiju (“eyelet, loop”). Compare also Saterland Frisian Noose (“loop, eyelet”) and Saterland Frisian Oose (“eyelet, loop”), potentially created via the same process.
Scrabble Score: 5
noose: valid Scrabble (US) TWL wordnoose: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
noose: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary