peg

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A cylindrical wooden or metal object used to fasten or as a bearing between objects.
  2. A protrusion used to hang things on.
  3. A support; a reason; a pretext.
  4. A peg moved on a crib board to keep score.
  5. A fixed exchange rate, where a currency's value is matched to the value of another currency or measure such as gold.
  6. A small quantity of a strong alcoholic beverage.
  7. A place formally allotted for fishing
  8. A leg or foot.
  9. One of the pins of a musical instrument, on which the strings are strained.
  10. A step; a degree.
  11. Ellipsis of clothes peg.
  12. A topic of interest, such as an ongoing event or an anniversary, around which various features can be developed.
verb
  1. To fasten using a peg.
  2. To affix or pin.
  3. To fix a value or price.
  4. To narrow the cuff openings of a pair of pants so that the legs take on a peg shape.
  5. To throw.
  6. To throw a ball at (someone), to hit (someone) with a ball.
  7. To indicate or ascribe an attribute to.
  8. To move one's pegs to indicate points scored; to score with a peg.
  9. To reach or exceed the maximum value on (a scale or gauge).
  10. To engage in anal sex by penetrating with a strap-on dildo.
  11. To keep working hard at something; to peg away.
  12. To drink alcohol frequently, especially brandy and soda; to tipple.
name
  1. A female given name.
  2. Diminutive of Margaret.
  3. Clipping of Peggy.
name
  1. Clipping of Winnipeg (city), usually preceded by "the".
noun
  1. Acronym of polyethylene glycol.
  2. Initialism of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy.
  3. Initialism of price/earnings to growth.
  4. Initialism of public, educational, and government (access television).
  5. Initialism of parsing expression grammar.
  6. Abbreviation of pyroelectric generator.

Pronunciation

/ˈpɛɡ/ [ˈpʰɛɡ] en-us-peg.ogg /ˈpeɪ̯ɡ/ [ˈpʰeɪ̯ɡ] /pɛɡ/ En-au-Peg.ogg

Word forms

peg pegs pegging pegged 'Peg

Etymology

From Middle English pegge, from Middle Dutch pegge (“pin, peg”), from Old Dutch *pigg-, *pegg-, from Proto-Germanic *pig-, *pag- (“peg, stake”), from Proto-Indo-European *bak-, *baḱ- (“club, pointed stick, peg”). Cognate with Dutch dialectal peg (“pin”), Low German pig, pigge (“peg, stick with a point”), Low German pegel (“post, stake”), Swedish pigg (“tooth, spike”), Danish pig (“spike”), Norwegian Bokmål pigg (“spike”), Irish bac (“stick, crook”), Latin baculum (“staff”), Latvian bakstît (“to poke”), Ancient Greek βάκτρον (báktron, “staff, walking stick”). Related to beak. This is one of the very few English words that begin with a p and come from Proto-Germanic. Proto-Germanic *p, when not in a consonant cluster beginning with *s, developed by Grimm's law from the Proto-Indo-European consonant *b, which was very rare. (To indicate or ascribe an attribute to): Assumed to originate from the use of pegs or pins as markers on a bulletin board or a list.

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.