haymaker
noun/ˈheɪmeɪkɚ/US
Etymology
From Middle English heymakere; equivalent to hay + maker.
- inherited from heymakere
Definitions
A person or machine which harvests or prepares tall grass for use as animal fodder.
- A long rank of haymakers—men and women—proceeded with their rakes, the white shirt-sleeves, straw bonnets, and ruddy faces, radiant in the bath of sunshine.
A particularly powerful punch, especially one which knocks down an opponent, thrown like…
A particularly powerful punch, especially one which knocks down an opponent, thrown like a scythe chop for cutting hay, as agricultural haymakers used to have strong arms.
- The saga of Newt Gingrich's ethics suddenly resembles a brawl between blindfolded boxers who flail away so wildly that each lands a haymaker on his own jaw.
Any decisive blow, shock, or forceful action.
- The real potential haymaker for the industry is a proposal, now gaining support in Congress, that would tax the profits private equity reaps on selling companies not at the low cap gains rate, but at the regular income tax rate.
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A surname.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for haymaker. 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