quoit

English

WOTD – 18 February 2016
The equipment used for the game of deck-quoits. The quoits are the rings of rope.
An 1817 fashion plate depicting three women and a man playing an inverse ring toss, in which they are tossing a quoit

Etymology

From Middle English coyte (flat stone), from Old French coite, from Latin culcita. Doublet of quilt.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /kɔɪt/
    • (file)
  • (US) IPA(key): /kɔɪt/, /kwɔɪt/
  • (dialectal, obsolete) IPA(key): /kweɪt/[1]
  • Rhymes: -ɔɪt

Noun

quoit (plural quoits)

  1. A flat disc of metal or stone thrown at a target in the game of quoits.
  2. A ring of rubber or rope similarly used in the game of deck-quoits.
  3. The flat stone covering a cromlech.
  4. An ancient burial mound, synonymous with dolmen.
  5. The discus used in ancient sports.

Translations

Verb

quoit (third-person singular simple present quoits, present participle quoiting, simple past and past participle quoited)

  1. (intransitive) To play quoits.
  2. (transitive) To throw like quoit.
    • 1791, Homer; W[illiam] Cowper, transl., “[The Iliad.] Book XXIII.”, in The Iliad and Odyssey of Homer, Translated into Blank Verse, [], volume I, London: [] J[oseph] Johnson, [], OCLC 779243096, lines 1038–1041, page 630:
      Each took / His ſtation, and Epeüs ſeized the clod. / He ſwung, he caſt it, and the Greecians laugh'd. / Leonteus, branch of Mars, quoited it next.

References

  1. Bingham, Caleb (1808), “Improprieties in Pronunciation, common among the people of New-England”, in The Child's Companion; Being a Conciſe Spelling-book [] , 12th edition, Boston: Manning & Loring, OCLC 671561968, page 76.

Anagrams

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