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leather. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
leather, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
leather in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
leather you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Etymology
From Middle English lether, from Old English leþer (“leather”), from Proto-West Germanic *leþr, from Proto-Germanic *leþrą (“leather”), possibly borrowed from Proto-Celtic *ɸlitrom, *letros, from Proto-Indo-European *pl̥tro-.
Cognate with West Frisian leare (“leather”), Low German Leder (“leather”), Dutch leder, leer (“leather”), German Leder (“leather”), Danish læder (“leather”), Swedish läder (“leather”), Icelandic leður (“leather”).
Pronunciation
Noun
leather (countable and uncountable, plural leathers)
- A tough material produced from the skin of animals, by tanning or similar process, used e.g. for clothing.
- Coordinate term: pseudoleather
- A piece of the above used for polishing.
- (colloquial) A cricket ball or football.
1918, M. M. Guy, Joe Doughty, page 157:The goalee made a frantic grab as the leather spun clean past him, but he was just a second too late, and Joe had scored for Redcliff.
- (plural: leathers) clothing made from the skin of animals, often worn by motorcycle riders.
- (baseball) A good defensive play
Jones showed good leather to snare that liner.
- (boxing) A punch.
- (dated, humorous) The skin.
- Clipping of fruit leather.
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Descendants
Translations
material produced by tanning animal skin
- Afrikaans: leer (af)
- Albanian: lëkurë (sq) f
- Amharic: ቆዳ (ḳoda)
- Arabic: جِلْد m (jild)
- Egyptian Arabic: جلد m (gild)
- Armenian: կաշի (hy) (kaši)
- Asturian: cueru m
- Avestan: 𐬗𐬀𐬭𐬆𐬨𐬀𐬥- (carəman-)
- Azerbaijani: dəri (az), gön (az)
- Bashkir: күн (kün)
- Belarusian: ску́ра f (skúra)
- Bengali: চামড়া (bn) (camṛa)
- Breton: lêr (br) m
- Bulgarian: ко́жа (bg) f (kóža)
- Burmese: သားရေ (my) (sa:re)
- Catalan: cuir (ca) m
- Chamicuro: shama
- Cherokee: ᎦᏃᏥ (ganotsi)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 皮革 (pei4 gaak3, pei4 gaap3), 皮 (pei4)
- Dungan: пи (pi)
- Mandarin: 皮革 (zh) (pígé), 皮 (zh) (pí)
- Cornish: ledher m
- Czech: kůže (cs) f
- Danish: læder (da) n
- Dutch: leer (nl) n, leder (nl) n (formal)
- Egyptian: (mskꜣ)
- Esperanto: ledo
- Estonian: nahk (et)
- Faroese: leður n
- Finnish: nahka (fi)
- French: cuir (fr) m
- Galician: coiro (gl) m
- Georgian: ტყავი (ka) (ṭq̇avi)
- German: Leder (de) n
- Greek: δέρμα (el) n (dérma)
- Ancient: βύρσα f (búrsa)
- Guaraní: pire
- Gujarati: ચર્મ (carma), ચામડું (cāmḍũ)
- Hebrew: עוֹר (he) (or)
- Hindi: चमड़ा (hi) m (camṛā), चर्म (hi) m (carm)
- Hungarian: bőr (hu)
- Icelandic: leður (is) n
- Ido: ledro (io)
- Indonesian: kulit (id)
- Ingrian: nahka
- Interlingua: corio
- Irish: leathar m
- Middle Irish: lethar
- Italian: cuoio (it) m
- Japanese: 皮革 (ja) (ひかく, hikaku), 革 (ja) (かわ, kawa)
- Kannada: ಚರ್ಮ (kn) (carma)
- Karachay-Balkar: тери (teri)
- Kazakh: тері (terı), көн (kön)
- Khmer: ស្បែក (km) (sbaek)
- Korean: 가죽 (ko) (gajuk), 피혁(皮革) (ko) (pihyeok)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: çerm (ku)
- Kyrgyz: тери (ky) (teri)
- Lao: ຫນັງ (nang), ໜັງສັດ (nang sat)
- Latin: cutis f, corium n, alūta f
- Latvian: āda (lv) f
- Lithuanian: oda (lt) f
- Macedonian: кожа (mk) f (koža)
- Malay: kulit (ms)
- Malayalam: തോൽ (ml) (tōl), തുകൽ (ml) (tukal)
- Maltese: ġilda f
- Manx: lhiare, liare
- Marathi: चामडे (cāmḍe)
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: савхи (mn) (savxi), арьс (mn) (arʹs)
- Mongolian: ᠰᠠᠪᠢᠬᠢ (sabiki), ᠠᠷᠠᠰᠤ (arasu)
- Navajo: akał
- Nepali: छाला (ne) (chālā)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: lær n
- Nynorsk: lêr n
- Occitan: cuèr (oc)
- Ojibwe: bashkwegin
- Old Church Slavonic:
- Cyrillic: кожа f (koža), скора f (skora)
- Old East Slavic: кожа f (koža), скора f (skora)
- Old English: leþer n
- Old Persian: (čarman-)
- Pashto: چرم m (čarm), سختیان m (saxtyãn), وژن m (wẑǝn)
- Persian: چرم (fa) (čarm), جلد (fa) (jeld) (archaic)
- Polish: skóra (pl) f
- Portuguese: couro (pt) m
- Punjabi: ਚਮੜਾ (camṛā)
- Quechua: qara
- Romanian: piele (ro) f, piele de animal f
- Russian: ко́жа (ru) f (kóža)
- Scottish Gaelic: leathar m
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: ко̏жа f
- Roman: kȍža (sh) f
- Sinhalese: සම් (sam)
- Slovak: koža (sk) f
- Slovene: usnje (sl) n
- Southern Altai: кӧн (kön), јару (ǰaru), тере (tere)
- Spanish: cuero (es) m, antelina f (faux)
- Swahili: ngozi (sw) class n
- Swedish: läder (sv) n
- Tagalog: katad
- Tajik: чарм (čarm), ҷилд (tg) (jild)
- Tamil: தோல் (ta) (tōl)
- Tarifit: irem m
- Tatar: күн (tt) (kün)
- Telugu: తోలు (te) (tōlu)
- Thai: หนัง (th) (nǎng)
- Tibetan: ཀོ་བ (ko ba)
- Turkish: deri (tr)
- Turkmen: deri, gön, gaýyş
- Udmurt: ку (ku)
- Ukrainian: шкі́ра f (škíra)
- Urdu: چمڑا m (camṛā), چرم m (carm)
- Uyghur: تېرە (tëre), خۇرۇم (xurum), كۆن (kön)
- Uzbek: charm (uz), teri (uz), koʻn (uz)
- Venetan: curame (vec) m, curam (vec) m, corame (vec) m
- Vietnamese: da thuộc (vi)
- Vilamovian: łaoder n
- Walloon: cur (wa) m
- Welsh: lledr (cy) m
- Yiddish: לעדער f or n (leder)
- Zulu: isikhumba (zu) class 7/8
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piece of leather used for polishing
baseball: good defensive play
Adjective
leather (not comparable)
- Made of leather.
- Synonym: leathern
1897 December (indicated as 1898), Winston Churchill, chapter II, in The Celebrity: An Episode, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company; London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., →OCLC:Sunning himself on the board steps, I saw for the first time Mr. Farquhar Fenelon Cooke. […] A silver snaffle on a heavy leather watch guard which connected the pockets of his corduroy waistcoat, together with a huge gold stirrup in his Ascot tie, sufficiently proclaimed his tastes.
- Referring to one who wears leather clothing (motorcycle jacket, chaps over 501 jeans, boots), especially as a sign of sadomasochistic homosexuality.
- Referring to an establishment of familial relations through agreed sexual or romantic deviance.
2021 June 14, Ellora Vilkin, Richard Sprott, “Consensual Non-Monogamy Among Kink-Identified Adults: Characteristics, Relationship Experiences, and Unique Motivations for Polyamory and Open Relationships”, in Archives of Sexual Behavior, volume 50, →DOI, pages 1521–1536:Some research has documented the phenomenon of leather families as a form of intentional, chosen families created by members of sexual and gender minority groups, often in the face of biological family rejection and marginalization in society (Bauer, 2010; Hammack et al., 2019; Murphy & Bjorngaard, 2019; Pitagora, 2016). Leather families are a network of people that acknowledge and practice ongoing supportive relationships “while sharing the commonalities of the leather and kink scene” (Bannon, 2016). […] Very few studies have examined how many people are members of leather or other “chosen” families.
Translations
Verb
leather (third-person singular simple present leathers, present participle leathering, simple past and past participle leathered)
- (transitive) To cover with leather.
2015, Rain Trueax, Lands of Fire:He rose and leathered his Colt as his father came to stand beside him.
- (transitive, intransitive) To form a leathery surface (on).
2003, Bonita Wagner, Satan's Choice, page 66:By the appearance of his deep suntan, which had leathered his skin, and the calluses that covered his hands, Sheriff Anderson figured the man to be one of the area ranchers.
2020, Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life, page 83:Some leather and droop like bat wings, others, as the poet Brenda Hillman writes, are 'hung in hashtags'.
- (transitive) To strike forcefully.
He leathered the ball all the way down the street.
- (transitive) To spank or beat with a leather belt or strap.
1806, Andrew Kippis, The New Annual Register:My father was very angry with me— -he took and leathered ( beat) me, because I ran away from my school ; for I did run away from my school ; he took and tied me up on a Sunday morning, leathered me a Friday night, and Saturday night : I was stripped naked when he leathered me on Friday night, and Saturday; my father told me to strip myself, and he leathered me, it was with a whip; but I do not know where he got the whip; he tied me with my arms extended so -- (spreading out her arms to their extremity, as if they were to be nailed upon a cross) -- My legs were tied too -- I was at the bottom of the dresser.
2005, H. Salisbury, Betrayed, →ISBN, page 4:My father was furious with me and reached for the strap. He brutally leathered me with it before sending me to bed for the night.
2011, Agnes Owens, Agnes Owens: The Complete Novellas, →ISBN:Anyway, bums were always on view in our family, getting leathered with a heavy belt.
Derived terms
References
- ^ Bingham, Caleb (1808) “Improprieties in Pronunciation, common among the people of New-England”, in The Child's Companion; Being a Conciſe Spelling-book , 12th edition, Boston: Manning & Loring, →OCLC, page 75.
Anagrams