Gallows

//ˈɡæloʊz// adv, name, noun, verb, slang

Definitions

Adverb
  1. 1
    Utterly; very. archaic, colloquial, not-comparable

    "They've got a gallows bad reputation, but you know what a place the beach is for talking."

Proper Noun
  1. 1
    plural of Gallow form-of, plural
Noun
  1. 1
    A wooden framework on which persons are executed by hanging.

    "Near-synonym: gibbet"

  2. 2
    an instrument of execution consisting of a wooden frame from which a condemned person is executed by hanging wordnet
  3. 3
    A wretch who deserves to be hanged. colloquial, obsolete

    "Ay, and a shrewd unhappy gallows too. / You'll ne'er be friends with him: a' kill'd your sister."

  4. 4
    The rest for the tympan when raised. obsolete
  5. 5
    Suspenders; braces. colloquial, obsolete

    "The last pair of "gallowses" made by Mr. Gratacap was an order from Mr. Brokaw, the clothier."

Show 2 more definitions
  1. 6
    Any contrivance with posts and crossbeam for suspending objects.

    "Lit by the moonlight through the window, he can see a FIGURE in the hospital bed alone in the room, and under a transparent oxygen tent. […] Tubes hang from a steel gallows beside the bed, and run to his nose and mouth."

  2. 7
    The main frame of a beam engine.
Verb
  1. 1
    third-person singular simple present indicative of gallow form-of, indicative, present, singular, third-person

Etymology

Etymology 1

From Middle English galwes, galewes, plural of galwe, galowe, from Old English galga, gealga, from Proto-West Germanic *galgō, from Proto-Germanic *galgô, from Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰalgʰ-, *ǵʰalg- (“long switch, rod, shaft, pole, perch”). The plural construction probably refers to the vertical and horizontal beams. Compare West Frisian galge, Dutch galg, German Galgen, Danish galge, Icelandic gálgi. For the pronunciation /ˈɡæləs/, compare bellows, bodice.

Etymology 2

From Middle English galwes, galewes, plural of galwe, galowe, from Old English galga, gealga, from Proto-West Germanic *galgō, from Proto-Germanic *galgô, from Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰalgʰ-, *ǵʰalg- (“long switch, rod, shaft, pole, perch”). The plural construction probably refers to the vertical and horizontal beams. Compare West Frisian galge, Dutch galg, German Galgen, Danish galge, Icelandic gálgi. For the pronunciation /ˈɡæləs/, compare bellows, bodice.

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