buttonhook

English

Etymology

button + hook

Noun

buttonhook (plural buttonhooks)

  1. (sewing) A hook used to pull thread through the holes of a button.
  2. A hook for pulling the buttons of gloves and shoes through the buttonholes.
    • 1976, Saul Bellow, Humboldt's Gift, New York: Avon, →ISBN, page 370:
      Hustlers used to sell shoes like that to the greenhorns fifty years ago with a buttonhook for a bonus.
  3. (American football) A play in which the receiver runs straight downfield, then turns back toward the line of scrimmage.
    • 1988, January 15, “Ted Cox”, in The Sports Section:
      Yet the Bears never set up the deep patterns with a turn-in or a buttonhook []

Translations

Verb

buttonhook (third-person singular simple present buttonhooks, present participle buttonhooking, simple past and past participle buttonhooked)

  1. (American football) To perform the buttonhook play.
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