maw
English
WOTD – 8 July 2012
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /mɔː/
- (US) IPA(key): /mɔ/
- (cot–caught merger) IPA(key): /mɑ/
- Homophones: more (non-rhotic accents)
- Rhymes: -ɔː
Etymology 1
From Middle English mawe, maghe, maȝe, from Old English maga (“stomach; maw”), from Proto-Germanic *magô (“belly; stomach”), from Proto-Indo-European *mak-, *maks- (“bag, bellows, belly”). Cognate with West Frisian mage, Dutch maag (“stomach; belly”), German Low German Maag, German Magen (“stomach”), Danish mave, Swedish mage (“stomach; belly”), and also with Welsh megin (“bellows”), archaic Russian мошна́ (mošná, “pocket, bag”), Lithuanian mãkas (“purse”).
Noun
maw (plural maws)
- (archaic) The stomach, especially of an animal.
- 1667, John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book X:
- So Death shall be deceav'd his glut, and with us two / Be forc'd to satisfie his Rav'nous Maw.
- 1667, John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book X:
- The upper digestive tract (where food enters the body), especially the mouth and jaws of a fearsome and ravenous creature.
- 1818, John Keats, Endymion:
- To save poor lambkins from the eagle's maw
- 1818, John Keats, Endymion:
- Any large, insatiable or perilous opening.
- Appetite; inclination.
- Beaumont and Fletcher:
- Unless you had more maw to do me good.
- Beaumont and Fletcher:
Translations
stomach
upper digestive tract
Etymology 2
By shortening of mother
Etymology 3
See mew (“a gull”).
Abinomn
Cornish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mæʊ/
Mapudungun
Middle English
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