haft

noun
/hæft/US/hɑːft/UK

Etymology

From Middle English haft, from Old English hæft, from Proto-West Germanic *haftī, from Proto-Germanic *haftiją.

  1. inherited from *haftiją
  2. inherited from *haftī
  3. inherited from hæft
  4. inherited from haft

Definitions

  1. The handle of a tool or weapon.

    • See this brandiſh'd Dagger: / […] / I'll bury to the haft, in her fair breaſt, / This Inſtrument of my Revenge.
  2. To fit a handle to (a tool or weapon).

    • Instead, they made finely crafted bone points to haft onto their spears, reserving the use of flint mostly for blades and scrapers.
  3. To grip by the handle.

  4. + 2 more definitions
    1. Alternative spelling of heft (“piece of pastureland which farm animals (chiefly cattle or…

      Alternative spelling of heft (“piece of pastureland which farm animals (chiefly cattle or sheep) have become accustomed to; flock or group of farm animals (chiefly cattle or sheep) which have become accustomed to a particular piece of pastureland”).

    2. Alternative spelling of heft (“(transitive) to accustom (a flock or group of farm…

      Alternative spelling of heft (“(transitive) to accustom (a flock or group of farm animals, chiefly cattle or sheep) to a piece of pastureland; to establish or settle (someone) in an occupation or place of residence; to establish or plant (something) firmly in a place; (intransitive, reflexive) of a thing: to establish or settle itself in a place”)

      • […] I hae heard him say, that the root of the matter was mair deeply hafted in that wild muirland parish than in the Canogate of Edinburgh.

The neighborhood

Derived

haftable

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for haft. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA