skein
Meanings
noun
- A quantity of thread, yarn, etc., wound on a reel then removed and loosely knotted into an oblong shape; a skein of cotton is formed by eighty turns of thread around a reel with a fifty-four inch diameter.
- A thing resembling a skein (noun etymology 1, noun sense 1) of thread, yarn, etc.
- The membrane of a fish ovary.
- A group of wildfowl (for example, geese or swans) in flight.
- Synonym of spireme (“the tangled mass of strands of chromatin seen in the early stages of mitosis, originally believed to be a single continuous strand (or two in a diploid cell, etc.)”).
- A tangle, a weave, a web.
- A winning streak.
- A series created by a web (“major broadcasting network”).
verb
- To weave or wind (thread, yarn, etc.) into a skein (noun etymology 1, noun sense 1).
- To intertwine or weave (something) with another thing.
noun
- A thin strip of an osier (“long, pliable twig from a plant, usually a willow”) used in basketmaking.
- A metallic strengthening band or thimble on the wooden arm of an axle of a wagon.
Pronunciation
Word forms
Etymology
The noun is derived from Middle English skaine, skayne (“quantity of string, thread, etc., wound on a reel; the string, thread, etc., so wound”), from Old French escaigne (modern French écagne, écaigne (Picardy)); further etymology uncertain, probably from Proto-Celtic, from Proto-Indo-European *skend- (“to split off”). The verb is derived from noun. cognates * Irish scáinne (“skein, clew”)
Synonyms
Derived words
Translations
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