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  1. Wiktionary
  2. nut
nut
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: Appendix:Variations of "nut"

Translingual

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

Clipping of Vietnamese Nùng with t as a placeholder.

Symbol

[edit]

nut

  1. (international standards) ISO 639-3 language code for Nùng.

See also

[edit]
  • Wiktionary’s coverage of Nùng terms

English

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • (Received Pronunciation, General American) enPR: nŭt, IPA(key): /nʌt/
  • Audio (General American):(file)
  • (California, New Zealand, Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): [nɐt]
  • (Northern England) IPA(key): /nʊt/
  • Rhymes: -ʌt

Etymology 1

[edit]
English Wikipedia has articles on:
nut and nut (botany)
Wikipedia Wikipedia
A bowl of mixed nuts (hard-shelled seeds).
Assorted nuts (fasteners with internal threads).
The nut of a violin.

From Middle English nute, note, from Old English hnutu, from Proto-West Germanic *hnut, from Proto-Germanic *hnuts (“nut”), from a root *knu- possibly shared with Proto-Celtic *knūs and Latin nux (“nut”). Based on the form of the nouns and the restriction of the root to Germanic, Celtic and Italic, it has been argued to be of non-Indo-European (substrate) origin.[1][2]

See also West Frisian nút, Dutch noot, German Nuss, Danish nød, Swedish nöt, Norwegian nøtt.

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “Sex senses?”)

Noun

[edit]

nut (plural nuts)

  1. (food, loosely) Any of various hard-shelled seeds or hard, dry fruits from various families of plants.
    There are many sorts of nuts: peanuts, cashews, pistachios, Brazil nuts and more.
    1. (botany, strictly) Such a fruit that is indehiscent.
  2. (hardware) A piece of hardware, typically metal and typically hexagonal or square in shape, with a hole through it having internal screw threads, intended to be screwed onto a threaded bolt or other threaded shaft.
    Hypernyms: fastener, hardware
    Hyponyms: acorn nut, barrel nut, jack nut, wing nut, wingnut, T-nut, well nut
    • 1998, Brian Hingley, Furniture Repair & Refinishing, page 95:
      As the bolt tightens into the nut, it pulls the tenon on the side rail into the mortise in the bedpost and locks them together. There are also some European beds that reverse the bolt and nut by setting the nut into the bedpost with the bolt inserted into a slotted area in the side of the rail.
  3. (slang) The head. [from 19th c.]
    Synonyms: coconut, bonce, noodle
    • 1891, James Main Dixon, Dictionary of Idiomatic English Phrases‎[2], page 226:
      Off one's nut—crazy; mad. S. Nut is a slang term for the head.
    • 1960, P. G. Wodehouse, Jeeves in the Offing, chapter V:
      Let the Cream get firmly in her nut the idea that Sir Roderick Glossop was not the butler, the whole butler and nothing but the butler, and disaster, as I saw it, loomed.
  4. (slang) A crazy person.
    Synonyms: nutjob, nut job, nutcase, nut case, nutbag, nutter, wingnut; see also Thesaurus:mad person
    He was driving his car like a nut.
    • 1975, Lawrence Hauben, Bo Goldman, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (motion picture), spoken by McMurphy (Jack Nicholson):
      Which one of you nuts has got any guts?
  5. (colloquial) An extreme enthusiast.
    a fashion nut — a gun nut — a sailing nut
  6. (UK, Ireland, slang, dated) An extravagantly fashionable young man. [1910s–1920s]
    • 1914, "Saki", ‘The Dreamer’, Beasts and Superbeasts, Penguin 2000 (Complete Short Stories), p. 323:
      ‘You are not going to be what they call a Nut, are you?’ she inquired with some anxiety, partly with the idea that a Nut would be an extravagance which her sister's small household would scarcely be justified in incurring [...].
  7. (anatomy) Senses related to male genitalia.
    1. (archaic) The glans (structure at the extremity of the penis or of the clitoris).
      • 1665, Dr. Chamberlain's Midwifes Practice‎[3], page 54:
        [...] The Tentigo, head or Nut of the Clitoris, covered by the Nymphes, as by a foreskin and the impaſſable paſſage of it [...]
      • 1763, A New and Complete Dictionary of Arts and Sciences:
        GLANS, in anatomy, the anterior extremity of the penis, called by other different names, as the head of the penis, the nut of the penis, and the balanus of the penis.
      • 1864, Edward Cox, Cox's Companion to the Sea Medicine Chest:
        In persons troubled with tight foreskins, the matter from the urethra becomes collected between the foreskin and the nut of the penis.
      • 1965, Peter Fryer, The Birth Controllers, page 23:
        In this work the great Italian anatomist described a linen sheath which he claimed to have invented. Made to fit the glans, or nut of the penis, it was worn for protection against venereal disease.
      • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:nut.
    2. (vulgar, slang, chiefly plural) A testicle, often used in the plural form.
      Synonyms: ball, (taboo slang) bollock, nads
      I kicked him in the nuts.
    3. (vulgar, slang, uncountable) Semen, ejaculate, cum.
      • 2005 July, “Breakdown”, in Spin, page 104:
        As loudmouthed lovermen, these Lil Jon-endorsed ATLiens denigrate women from the window to the wall, generously offering to "make nut come out your nose."
    4. (vulgar, slang, countable) Orgasm, ejaculation; especially release of semen; cumshot
      He just needs a good nut to make himself feel better.
      • 2020, Dontavious Robinson, Gangster Mission Part One, Page Publishing, Inc, →ISBN:
        […] feelin' her pussy grippin' his dick as her nut lubricated him […]
      • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:nut.
  8. (US, slang) Monthly expense to keep a venture running.
    • 2025 August 6, “Got a Nut”, in South Park, season 27, episode 2, spoken by Mr. Mackey:
      $8,000 a month? I had no idea my nut was that big.
  9. (US, slang) The amount of money necessary to set up some venture; set-up costs.
    • 1971, Hunter S. Thompson, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Harper Perennial, published 2005, page 11:
      My attorney was waiting in a bar around the corner. “This won't make the nut,” he said, “unless we have unlimited credit.”
  10. (US, slang) A stash of money owned by an extremely rich investor, sufficient to sustain a high level of consumption if all other money is lost.
  11. (music, lutherie) On stringed instruments such as guitars and violins, the small piece at the peghead end of the fingerboard that holds the strings at the proper spacing and, in most cases, the proper height.
  12. (typography slang) En, a unit of measurement equal to half of the height of the type in use.
  13. (climbing) A shaped piece of metal, threaded by a wire loop, which is jammed in a crack in the rockface and used to protect a climb. (Originally, machine nuts [sense #2] were used for this purpose.)
    • 2005, Tony Lourens, Guide to climbing, page 88:
      When placing nuts, always look for constrictions within the crack, behind which the nut can be wedged.
  14. (poker, attributive) The best possible hand of a certain type. Compare nuts (“the best possible hand available”).
    nut straight, nut flush, nut full house
  15. (firearms) The tumbler of a gunlock.[3]
  16. (nautical) A projection on each side of the shank of an anchor, to secure the stock in place.
  17. (archaic except in combination with a modifier) A small rounded cake or cookie.
    dough-nut
    ginger nut
Derived terms
[edit]
  • anacardium nut
  • anchor nut
  • areca nut
  • astronut
  • Bambara nut
  • Barbados nut
  • barrel nut connector
  • bat nut
  • bay nut
  • becuiba nut
  • beech nut
  • beechnut
  • beer nut
  • be on someone's nuts
  • betel nut
  • betel nut beauty
  • bitternut
  • bladdernut
  • bloodnut
  • brazil nut, Brazil nut
  • Brazil nut effect
  • breadnut
  • bust a nut
  • butterfly nut
  • butternut
  • candlenut
  • cap nut
  • cashew nut, cashew-nut
  • castellated nut
  • castle nut
  • check nut
  • clagnut
  • clearing nut
  • clinch nut
  • cob nut
  • coconut
  • coquilla nut
  • coquito nut
  • corn nut
  • cream nut
  • date-nut bread
  • deez nuts
  • dicknut
  • difficult nut to crack
  • djave nut
  • dome nut
  • donut
  • do one's nut
  • doughnut
  • dough-nut
  • dumbnut
  • earnut
  • earthnut
  • econut
  • employ a steam engine to crack a nut
  • environut
  • even a blind squirrel can find a nut once in a while
  • feminut (blend)
  • flare nut
  • flare nut wrench, flare-nut wrench
  • fluffernutter
  • Fluffernutter
  • from soup to nuts
  • fucknut
  • fuzznut
  • gall-nut
  • gallnut
  • get off the nut
  • gingerbread nut
  • gingernut
  • ginger nut
  • ginkgo nut
  • give one's left nut
  • goat nut
  • groundnut
  • grugru nut
  • gumnut
  • hard nut to crack
  • have the world by the nuts
  • hazel nut
  • hazelnut
  • heartnut
  • hickory nut
  • hognut
  • I'm allergic to nuts
  • ivory nut
  • Jesuits' nuts
  • Jesus nut
  • kola nut
  • land of fruits and nuts
  • let one's nuts hang
  • Levant nut
  • locknut
  • lotus nut
  • love nut
  • lucky nut
  • lug nut
  • macadamia nut
  • Madeira nut
  • Malabar nut
  • marking nut, marking-nut
  • marking nut tree, marking-nut tree
  • micronut
  • midshipman's nuts
  • mixed nuts
  • monkeynut
  • monkey nut
  • mummy nut
  • mutt's nuts
  • neatball
  • nicker nut
  • nutarian
  • nutbag
  • nut ball
  • nutball
  • nutballs
  • nutbar
  • nut bar, nut-bar
  • nutbeam
  • nut behind the bolt
  • nutbowl
  • nut bread
  • nutbreaker
  • nut-brown
  • nut-brown butter
  • nutburger
  • Nutbush
  • nut butter
  • nutcake
  • nut case
  • nutcase
  • nut clam
  • nutcrack
  • nutcracker
  • nut-cut
  • nut cutlet
  • nut cutting
  • nut-cutting time
  • nut dash
  • nut driver
  • nutdriver
  • Nutella
  • nutfall
  • nutfarm
  • nut flush
  • nut full house
  • nutgall
  • nutgrass
  • nut-grass
  • nuthack
  • nuthacker
  • nuthatch
  • nuthead
  • nut head, nut-head
  • nut-hook
  • nuthook
  • nut house
  • nuthouse
  • nuthugger
  • nut huggers
  • nut job
  • nutjobber
  • nutjuice
  • nutless
  • nutlet
  • nut lettuce
  • nutlike
  • nutling
  • nut loaf
  • nutly
  • nutmeal
  • nutmeat
  • nutmeg
  • nut milk
  • nut out
  • nutpecker
  • nutpick
  • nutpicker
  • nutpicking
  • nut pine
  • nut quad
  • nutrider
  • nut roast
  • nut roll
  • nutrush
  • nutsack
  • nuts and bolts
  • nutsedge
  • nutsetter
  • nutshell
  • nutshot
  • nuts to butts
  • nut straight
  • nutsucker
  • nutter
  • nuttery
  • nuttish
  • nut tree
  • nutty
  • nut up
  • nut weevil
  • nutwood
  • nut wrench
  • off one's nut
  • off one's nuts
  • off the nut
  • oilnut
  • on the nut
  • palm nut
  • paradise nut
  • Pará nut
  • peanut
  • peppernut
  • pepper nut
  • physic nut
  • pignut
  • pili nut
  • pilot nut
  • pine nut
  • pine nut syndrome
  • pinyon nut
  • pistachio nut
  • poison nut
  • poison-nut
  • post-nut clarity
  • post nut clarity
  • pre-nut
  • purging nut
  • quandong nut
  • Queensland nut
  • reefer's nut
  • Ringnut
  • rush nut
  • Saint Anthony's nut
  • seednut
  • seed-nut
  • Seychelles nut
  • sleeve nut
  • soapnut
  • soup-to-nuts
  • soy nut
  • spicenut
  • stone nut
  • sweet as a nut
  • tagua nut
  • taqua nut
  • the nut does not fall far from the tree
  • thumbnut
  • tiger-nut
  • tiger nut
  • tougher nut to crack
  • toughest nut to crack
  • tough nut
  • tough nut to crack
  • tree nut
  • truck nuts
  • turdnut
  • use a sledgehammer to crack a nut
  • vomic nut
  • vomiting nut
  • vomit nut
  • walnut
  • walshnut
  • welshnut
  • wing-nut
  • wingnut
  • wire nut
  • Yowah nut
Descendants
[edit]
  • → Japanese: ナット (natto)
Translations
[edit]
hard-shelled fruit
  • Adyghe: дае (daje)
  • Afrikaans: neut (af)
  • Ainu: ニヌㇺ (ninum)
  • Albanian: arrë (sq)
  • Arabic: جَوْزَة f (jawza), مُكَسَّرَات f pl (mukassarāt)
  • Armenian: ընկույզ (hy) (ənkuyz)
  • Aromanian: nucã f
  • Azerbaijani: qoz (az)
  • Bashkir: сәтләүек (sətləwek)
  • Basque: intxaur (eu)
  • Belarusian: арэ́х m (aréx)
  • Bengali: বাদাম (bn) (badam)
  • Brunei Malay: kacang
  • Bulgarian: я́дка (bg) f (jádka) (kernel) о́рех (bg) m (óreh) (walnut), фъстъ́к (bg) m (fǎstǎ́k) (pistachio, peanut), ле́шник (bg) m (léšnik) (hazelnut)
  • Burmese: အခွံမာသီး (my) (a.hkwammasi:)
  • Buryat: һамар (hamar)
  • Carpathian Rusyn: о́рїх m (órjix)
  • Catalan: nou (ca) f
  • Chamicuro: s̈hololoki
  • Chechen: бӏар (bˀar)
  • Chinese:
    Mandarin: 堅果 / 坚果 (zh) (jiānguǒ)
  • Chuvash: мӑйӑр (măjăr)
  • Cree: ᐹᑳᐣ (paakaan)
  • Crimean Tatar: ceviz, qoz
  • Czech: ořech (cs) m
  • Danish: nød (da)
  • Dutch: noot (nl) f
  • Esperanto: nukso
  • Estonian: pähkel
  • Evenki: няңта
  • Faroese: nøt f
  • Finnish: pähkinä (fi)
  • French: fruit sec (fr) m, noix (fr) f (literally ‘walnut’ but often used generically), fruit à coque (fr) m
  • Friulian: nole f
  • Galician: noz (gl) f, froita seca (gl) f
  • Georgian: კაკალი (ḳaḳali), თხილი (txili)
  • German: Nuss (de) f
    Alemannic German: Nüßli (diminutive; ‘little nut’)
  • Greek: ξηρός καρπός (el) m (xirós karpós), καρύδι (el) n (karýdi)
    Ancient: κάρυον n (káruon)
  • Haitian Creole: nwa
  • Hausa: goro (ha)
  • Hebrew: אֱגוֹז (he) m (egóz)
  • Hindi: अख़रोट (hi) m (axroṭ)
  • Hungarian: dió (hu) (walnut in particular and an element in the name of some other nuts), dióféle (literally: ’walnut-like’, the family of this fruit), dió-, mogyoró- és gesztenyeféle (walnuts, hazelnuts/peanuts, chestnuts, and related fruits)
  • Icelandic: hneta (is) f, hnota f (rare)
  • Indonesian: kacang (id)
  • Ingrian: päähkänä
  • Ingush: бӏар (bˀar)
  • Irish: cnó (ga) m, meas m
    Old Irish: cnú f
  • Isan: please add this translation if you can
  • Italian: noce (it) f
  • Japanese: 堅果 (ja) (けんか, kenka), 木の実 (ja) (このみ, konomi, きのみ, kinomi), ナッツ (ja) (nattsu)
  • Javanese: kacang (jv)
  • Kabardian: дэ (kbd) (dɛ)
  • Kashubian: òrzech m
  • Kazakh: жаңғақ (jañğaq)
  • Khmer: គ្រាប់ (km) (krŏəp)
  • Korean: 견과(堅果) (ko) (gyeon'gwa)
  • Kumyk: къоз (qoz)
  • Kyrgyz: жаңгак (ky) (jaŋgak)
  • Lao: ແຫ້ງເປືອກ (ngǣ pư̄ak), ຖົ່ວ (thūa)
  • Latgalian: rīksts
  • Latin: nux (la) f
  • Latvian: rieksts (lv) m
  • Lithuanian: riešutas m
  • Livonian: pēgõz
  • Lombard: nos (lmo) f
  • Macedonian: орев m (orev)
  • Malagasy: vadin-tsaikiro (mg)
  • Malay: kacang (ms)
  • Malecite-Passamaquoddy: pokan
  • Maltese: ġewż m
  • Manx: cro
  • Maori: natinati, nati
  • Miami: pakaani
  • Mongolian:
    Cyrillic: самар (mn) (samar)
    Mongolian: ᠰᠠᠮᠤᠷ (samur)
  • Navajo: neeshchʼííʼ
  • Neapolitan: noce f
  • North Frisian: (Mooring) naas f
  • Northern Thai: please add this translation if you can
  • Norwegian:
    Bokmål: nøtt (no) m or f
    Nynorsk: nøtt f, nòt f
  • Occitan: notz (oc) f
  • Ojibwe: bagaan
  • Old Church Slavonic:
    Cyrillic: орѣхъ m (orěxŭ)
  • Old East Slavic: орѣхъ m (orěxŭ)
  • Old English: hnutu f
  • Ossetian: ӕхсӕр (æxsær)
  • Pannonian Rusyn: орех m (orex)
  • Penobscot: pàkαn
  • Persian:
    Iranian Persian: مَغْز (maġz), آجیل (fa) (âjil) (nuts and dried seeds), فَنْدُق (fandoġ) (hazelnut), بادام زَمینی (bâdâm zamini) (peanut), گِرْدو (gerdu) (walnut), بادام (fa) (bâdâm) (almond), لُوْز (lowz) (almond)
  • Plautdietsch: Nät f
  • Polish: orzech (pl) m
  • Portuguese: noz (pt) f
  • Romani: akhor m
  • Romanian: nucă (ro) f, alună (ro)
  • Russian: оре́х (ru) m (oréx)
  • Samogitian: rėišots
  • Scottish Gaelic: cnò f
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic: о̀рах m
    Roman: òrah (sh) m
  • Shan: please add this translation if you can
  • Sicilian: nuci (scn) f
  • Silesian: ôrzech m
  • Slovak: orech m
  • Slovene: oreh (sl) m
  • Somali: miro (so)
  • Sorbian:
    Lower Sorbian: wórjech m
    Upper Sorbian: worjech m
  • Spanish: nuez (es) f
  • Swahili: njugu (sw)
  • Swedish: nöt (sv) c
  • Tagalog: balukbunga
  • Tajik: ҷавз (javz), чормағз (tg) (čormaġz)
  • Tamil: கொட்டை (ta) (koṭṭai), பருப்பு (ta) (paruppu)
  • Tarifit: aɣyay m, taɣyašt f
  • Tatar: чикләвек (tt) (çikläwek)
  • Telugu: గింజ (te) (giñja)
  • Thai: ถั่ว (th) (tùua)
  • Tok Pisin: nat
  • Turkish: ceviz (tr)
  • Turkmen: hoz
  • Ukrainian: горі́х (uk) m (horíx), орі́х m (oríx) (rare, dialectal)
  • Urdu: اَخْروٹ m (axroṭ) (walnut), مَغْز m (maġz)
  • Uyghur: ياڭاق (ya'ngaq)
  • Uzbek: yongʻoq (uz)
  • Venetan: noxa (vec)
  • Vietnamese: đậu (vi)
  • Welsh: cneuen (cy) f
  • West Frisian: nút
  • Yiddish: נוס m or f (nus)
  • Zazaki: goz (diq)
  • Zhuang: please add this translation if you can
that fits on a bolt
  • Albanian: kundërvidhë (sq) f
  • Arabic: صَمُولَة f (ṣamūla)
  • Armenian: պնդօղակ (hy) (pndōġak), մանեկ (hy) (manek)
  • Azerbaijani: qayka (az), somun (az)
  • Basque: azkoin
  • Belarusian: га́йка f (hájka), гаёк m (hajók)
  • Bulgarian: га́йка (bg) f (gájka)
  • Burmese: မူလီခေါင်း (my) (mulihkaung:), ဇာဝီ (my) (jawi), နပ် (my) (nap)
  • Catalan: femella (ca) f
  • Chinese:
    Mandarin: 螺母 (zh) (luómǔ), 母 (zh) (mǔ), 螺帽 (zh) (luómào)
  • Czech: matka (cs) f, matice (cs) f
  • Danish: møtrik c
  • Dutch: moer (nl) f
  • Esperanto: boltingo
  • Estonian: mutter (et)
  • Finnish: mutteri (fi)
  • French: écrou (fr) m
  • Georgian: ქანჩი (ka) (kanči)
  • German: Mutter (de) f
  • Greek: παξιμάδι (el) n (paximádi)
  • Hebrew: אוֹם (he) m (um)
  • Hindi: नट (hi) m (naṭ)
  • Hungarian: anyacsavar (hu)
  • Icelandic: ró (is) f
  • Ingrian: gaika
  • Irish: cnó (ga) m
  • Italian: dado (it) m
  • Japanese: ナット (ja) (natto)
  • Kazakh: тегір (kk) (tegır), сомын (somyn)
  • Khmer: ខ្ចៅញី (khcaw ñii)
  • Korean: 너트 (ko) (neoteu), 암나사 (amnasa)
  • Kyrgyz: гайка (ky) (gayka), үлүк (ky) (ülük)
  • Latvian: uzgrieznis m
  • Lithuanian: veržlė f
  • Macedonian: навртка f (navrtka), винт m (vint)
  • Maori: porowiri, peru
  • Mongolian:
    Cyrillic: гайк (gajk)
  • Nepali: नट (naṭ)
  • Norwegian:
    Bokmål: mutter (no) m
    Nynorsk: mutter m
  • Persian:
    Iranian Persian: مُهْرِه (mohre)
  • Polish: nakrętka (pl) f
  • Portuguese: porca (pt) f
  • Romanian: piuliță (ro) f
  • Russian: га́йка (ru) f (gájka)
  • Scottish Gaelic: cnò f
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic: на̀вртка f, ма̏тица f
    Roman: nàvrtka (sh) f, mȁtica (sh) f
  • Slovak: matka (sk) f, matica (sk) f
  • Slovene: matica f
  • Sorbian:
    Lower Sorbian: šrubnica f
  • Spanish: tuerca (es) f
  • Swahili: nati (sw)
  • Swedish: mutter (sv) c
  • Tagalog: tuwerka
  • Tajik: гайка (tg) (gayka)
  • Tatar: гайка (ğayqa)
  • Telugu: నట్టు (te) (naṭṭu)
  • Thai: นอต (th) (nɔ́t), แป้นเกลียว (th) (bpɛ̂n-gliao)
  • Tibetan: མོ་གཅུས (mo gcus)
  • Tok Pisin: nat
  • Turkish: somun (tr)
  • Turkmen: gaýka
  • Ukrainian: га́йка f (hájka)
  • Urdu: نَٹ m (naṭ)
  • Uyghur: گايكا (gayka)
  • Uzbek: gayka (uz)
  • Vietnamese: ốc (vi)
  • Welsh: nyten
slang: the head
  • Arabic: رَأْس (ar) m or f (raʔs), قَرْعَة f (qarʕa)
  • Bulgarian: глава́ (bg) f (glavá)
  • Chinese:
    Mandarin: 腦袋 / 脑袋 (zh) (nǎodài)
  • Dutch: kop (nl) m
  • Finnish: kaali (fi), nuppi (fi)
  • German: Birne (de) f
  • Hungarian: fej (hu)
  • Norwegian:
    Bokmål: nøtt (no) m or f
    Nynorsk: nøtt f
  • Polish: łeb (pl) m
  • Portuguese: cachola (pt) f
  • Romanian: cap (ro) m
  • Russian: башка́ (ru) f (bašká), коча́н (ru) m (kočán), ре́па (ru) f (répa), ты́ква (ru) f (týkva)
  • Scottish Gaelic: sgrog m
  • Tok Pisin: het
  • Ukrainian: ба́шта (uk) f (bášta)
slang: insane person
  • Arabic: مَخْبُول m (maḵbūl)
  • Armenian: գիժ (hy) (giž)
  • Belarusian: шалёны m (šaljóny)
  • Dutch: gek (nl) c, (Belgium and South Netherlands) zot (nl) c
  • Finnish: hullu (fi), kahjo (fi), pöljä (fi), pöpi (fi)
  • French: fou (fr) m, folle (fr) f
  • Georgian: გიჟი (giži), გადარეული (gadareuli), დარეხვილი (darexvili)
  • German: Irre (de) f, Irrer (de) m, Spinner (de) m
  • Greek: τρελός (el) m (trelós)
  • Hungarian: bolond (hu), őrült (hu)
  • Icelandic: brjálæðingur (is) m
  • Irish: gealt f
    Old Irish: dásachtach m
  • Italian: pazzo (it) m
  • Japanese: 気違い (ja) (きちがい, kichigái)
  • Korean: 미친 사람 (michin saram)
  • Latvian: trakais m, jucis m
  • Macedonian: лу́дак m (lúdak)
  • Maori: porowairangi
  • Norwegian:
    Bokmål: galning m, gærning m
    Nynorsk: galning m
  • Ottoman Turkish: دلی (deli)
  • Polish: świr (pl) m, wariat (pl) m, psychol (pl) m, oszołom (pl), szajbus (pl) m, świrus m, psychiczny (pl) m
  • Portuguese: louco (pt) m, doido (pt) m, maluco (pt) m
  • Romanian: nebun (ro) m, țicnit (ro) m
  • Russian: сумасше́дший (ru) m (sumasšédšij), чо́кнутый (ru) m (čóknutyj), псих (ru) m (psix), ши́зик (ru) m (šízik)
  • Spanish: loco (es) m, chiflado (es) m, chalado (es) m (Spain), cabra loca f, como una cabra (locution)
  • Swedish: knäppis (sv) c
  • Tagalog: tanga (tl), baliw (tl)
  • Telugu: తిక్కల వ్యక్తి (tikkala vyakti), తింగర వ్యక్తి (tiṅgara vyakti)
  • Tok Pisin: longlongman
  • Turkish: üşütük (tr), kaçık (tr)
  • Ukrainian: божеві́льний (uk) m (boževílʹnyj), шале́ний m (šalényj), навіже́ний m (navižényj)
extreme enthusiast
  • Finnish: -hullu (fi)
  • French: fou (fr) m, folle (fr) f, malade (fr) m or f
anatomy: glans — see glans
slang: testicle
  • Arabic: بَيْضَة (ar) f (bayḍa)
  • Armenian: ձու (hy) (ju)
  • Bulgarian: ташак (bg) m (tašak)
  • Catalan: ou (ca)
  • Chinese:
    Mandarin: 球 (zh) (qiú), 蛋 (zh) (dàn)
  • Czech: koule (cs) f
  • Dutch: bal (nl) m, teelbal (nl) m
  • Finnish: palli (fi), kulkunen (fi)
  • French: couille (fr) f
  • German: Ei (de) n, Nuss (de) f
  • Hungarian: here (hu)
  • Italian: coglione (it) m, minchione (it) m, palla (it) f
  • Kannada: ಕಾಯಿ (kn) (kāyi)
  • Latvian: pauti m pl
  • Macedonian: јајце n (jajce), маде n (made)
  • Norwegian:
    Bokmål: ball (no) m
  • Persian: تخم (fa) (toxm)
  • Portuguese: bagos m pl, ovos (pt) m pl, colhão (pt) m
  • Romanian: coi (ro) n, ou (ro), boș (ro) n
  • Russian: яйцо́ (ru) n (jajcó)
  • Scottish Gaelic: clach f
  • Spanish: cojón (es) m, huevo (es) m
  • Tagalog: bayag
  • Tok Pisin: bol
  • Turkish: taşak (tr)
  • Ukrainian: бубоне́ць (uk) m (bubonécʹ, literally “small tambourine”), яє́чко (uk) n (jajéčko)
slang: orgasm; ejaculation
  • Bulgarian: изпра́зване (bg) n (izprázvane)
  • Finnish: mälli (fi) (of semen)
amount of money necessary to set up some venture
  • Finnish: perustamiskustannukset pl (standard language term)
slang: stash of money
  • Finnish: pesämuna (fi)
  • Russian: зана́чка (ru) f (zanáčka)
  • Ukrainian: зана́чка f (zanáčka), схо́ванка f (sxóvanka)
musical instruments: small piece that holds the strings at the proper spacing
  • Finnish: yläsatula
  • French: sillet (fr) m
  • German: Obersattel m, Sattel (de) m
  • Maori: paepane
  • Persian: شیطانک (fa) (šeytânak)
  • Spanish: ceja (es) f
  • Swedish: sadel (sv) c, översadel c
  • Turkish: eşik (tr)
typography: unit equal to half of the height of the type in use
  • German: Halbgeviert n
climbing: shaped piece of metal used to protect a climb
  • Finnish: kiila (fi)
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
  • Breton: (please verify) kraoñ (br) collective noun (please verify) kraoñenn (br) f (1), (please verify) kraouenn f (2), (please verify) brizh-sod (3), (please verify) kell (br) f, (please verify) divgell (br) pl (4)
  • Interlingua: (1) (please verify) nuce, (2) (please verify) matre vite, (3) (please verify) folle, (4) (please verify) teste, (4) (please verify) testiculo
  • Ladino: (please verify) מואיס ?, (please verify) mwes ?

Verb

[edit]

nut (third-person singular simple present nuts, present participle nutting, simple past and past participle nutted or (nonstandard) nut)

  1. (mostly in the form "nutting") To gather nuts.
    • 1575, John Stephen Farmer, editor, Five anonymous plays, Early English Dramatists‎[4], volume Fourth Series, London: William How for Richard Ihones, page 171:
      I will no more a-nutting go ; That journey caused all this woe.
    • 1847, Howitt's Journal of Literature and Popular Progress:
      […] the huge country fellow […] leapt forth from the underwood, exclaiming "That is not allowed, gentlemen! That is not allowed! Nobody is allowed to nut here; I must take your names to Sir John!"
    • 1978, Edwin Way Teale, A walk through the year‎[5], Dodd, Mead, →ISBN, page 238:
      We are going a-nutting.
  2. (UK, transitive, slang) To hit deliberately with the head; to headbutt.
    Synonyms: butt, Glasgow kiss, Liverpool kiss, loaf
    • 1999, Nik Cohn, Yes we have no: adventures in the other England:
      One night, we were fumbling each other out by the toilets when a Rocker in full leathers came out of the Gents and, without breaking stride or saying a word, nutted me square between the eyes. I went down as though shot...
  3. (slang, mildly vulgar) To orgasm; to ejaculate.
    Synonyms: blow a nut, bust a nut; see also Thesaurus:ejaculate
    • 1996, “Bust a Nut”, performed by Uncle Luke featuring The Notorious B.I.G.:
      I got a bitch that suck my dick 'til I nut
    • 2006, Noire [pseudonym], Thug-A-Licious: An Urban Erotic Tale, New York, N.Y.: One World, Ballantine Books, →ISBN, page 152:
      Isis rode my mug like she was on a ten-inch dick, and as soon as she nutted I tossed her ass off a me and flipped her on her back, then fucked the shit outta her cause it was payback time.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:nut.
  4. (slang) To hit in the testicles.
  5. (slang) To defeat thoroughly.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:nut.
Related terms
[edit]
  • do one's nut

Etymology 2

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

nut (plural nuts)

  1. Alternative form of nuth (“Indian nose ring”).

Etymology 3

[edit]

Variant of not.

Interjection

[edit]

nut

  1. (Scotland, colloquial) No.
    • 1995, Alan Warner, Morvern Callar, Vintage, published 2015, page 26:
      Did you like them boys? I goes.
      Nut. She shook her hair.
      Neither?
      Nut. Right townies.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Kroonen, Guus (2013), “*hnut-”, in Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 11)‎[1], Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 238
  2. ^ De Vaan, Michiel (2008), “nux”, in Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 420
  3. ^ Edward H[enry] Knight (1877), “Nut”, in Knight’s American Mechanical Dictionary. […], volumes II (GAS–REA), New York, N.Y.: Hurd and Houghton […], →OCLC.

Anagrams

[edit]
  • NTU, Tun, tun

Afrikaans

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): [nʊ̠t]
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

[edit]

nut (uncountable)

  1. use, benefit

References

[edit]
  • 2007. The UCLA Phonetics Lab Archive. Los Angeles, CA: UCLA Department of Linguistics.

Dutch

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

From the adjective Middle Dutch nutte (“useful”), or from Middle Dutch nut (“yield”), from Old Dutch *nut, from Proto-Germanic *nutją, *nutjō (“profit, yield, utility”), from Proto-Indo-European *newd- (“to seize; grasp; use”).

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /nʏt/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Hyphenation: nut
  • Rhymes: -ʏt
  • Homophone: Nuth

Noun

[edit]

nut n (uncountable, no diminutive)

  1. use, point, utility, sense
    Synonym: zin
  2. benefit
    Synonym: voordeel

Derived terms

[edit]
  • Nutsman
  • nutteloos
  • nuttig
  • ten algemenen nutte

Descendants

[edit]
  • Afrikaans: nut

Adjective

[edit]

nut (comparative nutter, superlative nutst)

  1. (obsolete) useful
    Synonym: nuttig

Declension

[edit]
Declension of nut
uninflected nut
inflected nutte
comparative nutter
positive comparative superlative
predicative/adverbial nut nutter het nutst
het nutste
indefinite m./f. sing. nutte nuttere nutste
n. sing. nut nutter nutste
plural nutte nuttere nutste
definite nutte nuttere nutste
partitive nuts nutters —

Derived terms

[edit]
  • onnut

Middle English

[edit]

Adverb

[edit]

nut

  1. alternative form of not

Norwegian Bokmål

[edit]
nut, the top to the left

Etymology

[edit]

From Old Norse hnútr.

Noun

[edit]

nut m (definite singular nuten, indefinite plural nuter, definite plural nutene)

  1. a tall, rounded mountain top

References

[edit]
  • “nut” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

Norwegian Nynorsk

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

From Old Norse hnútr.

Noun

[edit]

nut m (definite singular nuten, indefinite plural nutar, definite plural nutane)

  1. a tall, rounded mountain top

References

[edit]
  • “nut” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.

Old Swedish

[edit]

Alternative forms

[edit]
  • not

Etymology

[edit]

From Old Norse hnot, from Proto-Germanic *hnuts.

Noun

[edit]

nut f

  1. nut

Declension

[edit]
Declension of nut (consonant stem)
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative nut nutin nyter nytrina(r), -rena(r)
accusative nut nutina, -ena nyter nytrina(r), -rena(r)
dative nut nutinni, -inne nutum, -om nutumin, -omen
genitive nuta(r) inna(r) nuta nutanna

Descendants

[edit]
  • Swedish: nöt

Polish

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /ˈnut/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -ut
  • Syllabification: nut
  • Homophone: Nut

Noun

[edit]

nut f

  1. genitive plural of nuta

Scots

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /nʌʔ/

Interjection

[edit]

nut

  1. (Central Scots) no; used to show disagreement or negation.

Unua

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

nut

  1. alternative form of naut

Further reading

[edit]
  • Elizabeth Pearce, A Grammar of Unua (2015)
Retrieved from "https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=nut&oldid=88586313"
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