hurt

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To cause (a person or animal) physical pain and/or injury.
  2. To cause (somebody) emotional pain.
  3. To be painful.
  4. To damage, harm, impair, undermine, impede.
adj
  1. Wounded, physically injured.
  2. Feeling physical or emotional pain.
noun
  1. An emotional or psychological humiliation or bad experience.
  2. A bodily injury causing pain; a wound or bruise.
  3. Injury; damage; detriment; harm
  4. A band on a trip hammer's helve, bearing the trunnions.
  5. A husk.
noun
  1. A roundel azure (blue circular spot).
name
  1. A town in Virginia.
  2. A surname.

Pronunciation

hû(r)t /hɜːt/ hûrt /hɝt/ en-us-hurt.ogg

Word forms

hurt hurts hurting no-table-tags glossary hurtest hurtedst hurteth more hurt most hurt

Etymology

From Middle English hurten, hirten, hertan (“to injure, scathe, knock together”), from Old Northern French hurter ("to ram into, strike, collide with"; > Modern French heurter), perhaps from Frankish *hūrt (“a battering ram”), cognate with Welsh hwrdd (“ram”) and Cornish hordh (“ram”). Compare Proto-Germanic *hrūtaną, *hreutaną (“to fall, beat”), from Proto-Indo-European *krew- (“to fall, beat, smash, strike, break”); however, the earliest instances of the verb in Middle English are as old as those found in Old French, which leads to the possibility that the Middle English word may instead be a reflex of an unrecorded Old English *hyrtan, which later merged with the Old French verb. Germanic cognates include Dutch horten (“to push against, strike”), Middle Low German hurten (“to run at, collide with”), Middle High German hurten (“to push, bump, attack, storm, invade”), Old Norse hrútr (“battering ram”). Alternate etymology traces Old Northern French hurter rather to Old Norse hrútr (“ram (male sheep)”), lengthened-grade variant of hjǫrtr (“stag”), from Proto-Germanic *herutuz, *herutaz (“hart, male deer”), which would relate it to English hart (“male deer”). See hart.

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