Definition of RABBIT

rabbit

Meanings

Plural: rabbits

Noun

  • any of various burrowing animals of the family Leporidae having long ears and short tails; some domesticated and raised for pets or food
  • the fur of a rabbit
  • flesh of any of various rabbits or hares (wild or domesticated) eaten as food
  • A mammal of most genera of the family Leporidae, with long ears, long hind legs and a short, fluffy tail.
  • The meat from this animal.
  • The fur of a rabbit typically used to imitate another animal's fur.
  • A runner in a distance race whose goal is mainly to set the pace, either to tire a specific rival so that a teammate can win or to help another break a record; a pacesetter.
  • A very poor batsman, selected as a bowler or wicket-keeper.
  • A batsman who is frequently dismissed by the same bowler (said to be that player's rabbit).
  • A large element at the beginning of a list of items to be bubble sorted, and thus tending to be quickly swapped into its correct position. Compare turtle.
  • Rarebit; Welsh rabbit or a similar dish: melted cheese served atop toast.
  • A pneumatically-controlled tool used to insert small samples of material inside the core of a nuclear reactor.
  • A vibrator with a shaft and a clitoral stimulator usually shaped like a rabbit's ears.

Verb

  • hunt rabbits
  • To hunt rabbits.
  • To flee.
  • To talk incessantly and in a childish manner; to babble annoyingly.
  • Confound; damn; drat.

Origin / Etymology

From Middle English rabet, rabette, from Anglo-Latin rabettus, from dialectal Old French rabotte, probably a diminutive of Middle Dutch or West Flemish robbe (“rabbit, seal”), of uncertain origin; possibly some imitative verb, maybe robben, rubben (“to rub”) is used here to allude to a characteristic of the animal. See rub.
Related forms include Middle French rabouillet (“baby rabbit”) and in French rabot (“plane”)), coming via Walloon Old French (reflected nowadays as Walloon robète (“rabbit”)), from Middle Dutch robbe ("rabbit; seal"; whence Modern Dutch rob (“rabbit", also "seal”)); also Middle Low German robbe, rubbe (“rabbit”), and the later German Low German Rubbe, Robb (“seal”), West Frisian robbe (“seal”), Saterland Frisian Rubbe (“seal”), North Frisian rob (“seal”), borrowed into German Robbe (“seal”).
Meant "young rabbit" until the 19th c., when it came to replace the original general term cony, owing to the latter's resemblance to and use as a euphemism for cunny, "vulva" (compare ass and donkey).

Synonyms

babble, blather, bolt, bunny, bunny rabbit, coney, cony, hare, lapin, prattle, rabbit on, run off, scamper

Scrabble Score: 10

rabbit is a valid Scrabble (US) TWL word
rabbit is a valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
rabbit is a valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary

Words With Friends Score: 12

rabbit is a valid Words With Friends word