keeper
nounEtymology
From Middle English kepere. By surface analysis, keep + -er.
- inherited from kepere
Definitions
One who keeps (retains) something.
- Finders keepers; losers weepers.
One who remains or keeps in a place or position.
- discreet; chaste; keepers at home
- I was not altogether surprised: they seemed to be, even more than people in the surrounding wolds, stolid keepers-to-themselves, impossible to stir, dourly determined to stick to the firm routine of their lives[…]
A fruit or vegetable that keeps (remains good) for some time without spoiling.
- Roxbury Russet: Market and keeper.
- And mark you, good keepers are some years bad keepers, as this year; and a hard, heavy, unbruisable Apple that really will keep to late on in the season is doubly valuable.
›+ 9 more definitionsshow fewer
A person or thing worth keeping.
- "Okay, that's a keeper," Harold said as he netted the 3-pounder and put him on a stringer over the side of the boat.
- When he brought me home and volunteered to come with me while I walked my dog, Max, I knew he was a keeper.
- We hadn't dated for long when he said those three magic words: "I'll cook tonight." I knew he was a keeper.
A person charged with guarding or caring for, storing, or maintaining something
A person charged with guarding or caring for, storing, or maintaining something; a custodian, a guard; sometimes a gamekeeper.
- And the Lord said unto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother? And he said, I know not: Am I my brother's keeper?
- The inquest on keeper Davidson was duly held, and at the commencement seemed likely to cause Tony Palliser less anxiety than he had expected.
The player charged with guarding a goal or wicket
The player charged with guarding a goal or wicket; a goalkeeper or wicketkeeper.
At Eton College, a student who is the captain of a sport or an activity such as drama.
A part of a mechanism that catches or retains another part, for example the part of a…
A part of a mechanism that catches or retains another part, for example the part of a door lock that fits in the frame and receives the bolt.
A thin, flexible tress or tongue of material (e.g. leather) at the end of a crop opposite…
A thin, flexible tress or tongue of material (e.g. leather) at the end of a crop opposite the handle, which is broad enough to prevent the horse's skin from being marked as it might be by a whip.
- The all-whalebone crop, braided with gut, pigskin handle, single brown stitched leather keeper, and close[…]
- “When we catch you—” A brief but vivid fantasy of the nose-ringed girl trailing a riding crop's cool leather keeper over her clenched and trembling ass shoved its way eagerly into Fran's imagination. “—we're gonna[…]”
An offensive play in which the quarterback runs toward the goal with the ball after it is…
An offensive play in which the quarterback runs toward the goal with the ball after it is snapped.
Synonym of armature (“piece of metal connecting the poles of a magnet to preserve its…
Synonym of armature (“piece of metal connecting the poles of a magnet to preserve its strength by forming a circuit”).
- The continuous lines indicate the moments, when the magnet and keeper of equal diameter (10.5mm) act upon each other […]
An English surname originating as an occupation for the keeper of a castle.
The neighborhood
Derived
account-keeper, alehouse keeper, alekeeper, barkeeper, bar-keeper, bathkeeper, beachkeeper, beastkeeper, beekeeper, birdkeeper, boatkeeper, book-keeper, bookkeeper, boxkeeper, bridgekeeper, brothel-keeper, brothelkeeper, bus-keeper, butter keeper, casekeeper, closet-keeper, cowkeeper, crossing keeper, crowkeeper, deer-keeper, divekeeper, doorkeeper, door-keeper, dramshopkeeper, dungeon-keeper, firekeeper, fishkeeper, flamekeeper, forestkeeper, gamekeeper, game keeper, gaolkeeper, gatekeeper, goal keeper, goalkeeper · +75 more
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for keeper. 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