monkey
See also: Monkey
English

A monkey.
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle Dutch monnekijn, or Middle Low German Moneke, name of the son of Martin the Ape in Reynard the Fox, a diminutive based off Old Spanish mona (“mona monkey”), shortening of mamona, variant of maimón, perhaps through Turkish maymun (“monkey”), from Arabic مَيْمُون (maymūn, “baboon”). Compare Old French Monequin.
Pronunciation
- enPR: mŭngki, IPA(key): /ˈmʌŋki/
Audio (US) (file) Audio (file) - Rhymes: -ʌŋki
Noun
monkey (plural monkeys)
- Any member of the clade Simiiformes not also of the clade Hominoidea containing humans and apes, from which they are usually, but not universally, distinguished by smaller size, a tail, and cheek pouches.
- He had been visiting an area zoo when a monkey swung from its tree perch, swiped his glasses and hurled them into a hippo hole.
- (informal) Any nonhuman primate, including apes.
- Chimpanzees are known to form bands to hunt and kill other monkeys.
- (informal) A mischievous child.
- Stop misbehaving, you little monkey!
- She's a cheeky monkey.
- 1909, Algernon Blackwood, You May Telephone From Here
- "Yes. He gets to Paris at seven in the morning. He promised to telephone the first thing."
"You expensive little monkey!"
"Why?"
"It's ten shillings for three minutes, or something like that, and you have to go to the G.P.O. or the Mansion House or some such place, I believe."
- "Yes. He gets to Paris at seven in the morning. He promised to telephone the first thing."
- A dance move popular in the 1960s.
- (Britain, slang) Five hundred pounds sterling; (US, dated) five hundred dollars.
- (slang) A person or the role of the person on the sidecar platform of a motorcycle involved in sidecar racing.
- (slang) A person with minimal intelligence and/or an unattractive appearance
- (blackjack) A face card.
- (slang) A menial employee who does a repetitive job, as in code monkey, grease monkey, phone monkey, powder monkey.
- The weight or hammer of a pile driver; a heavy mass of iron, which, being raised high, falls on the head of the pile, and drives it into the earth; the falling weight of a drop hammer used in forging.
- A small trading vessel of the sixteenth century.
- (slang) A drug habit; an addiction; a compulsion.
- 1938, Alfred R. Lindesmith, "Argot of the Underworld Drug Addict", Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, Vol. 29, Issue 2 (July-August):
- Monkey: a habit, as in "I have a monkey on my back." Usually used when one is sick from lack of drugs.
- 1949, Nelson Algren, The Man with The Golden Arm:
- "Man, I wasn't hooked, I was crucified. The monkey got so big he was carryin' me. [...] When I hear a junkie tell me he wants to kick the habit but he just can't I know he lies even if he don't know he does. He wants to carry the monkey, he's punishin' hisself for somethin' 'n don't even know it. [...] Then I got forty grains 'n went up to the room 'n went from monkey to nothin' in twenny-eight days 'n that's nine-ten years ago 'n the monkey's dead."
"The monkey's never dead, Fixer," Frankie told him knowingly.
- "Man, I wasn't hooked, I was crucified. The monkey got so big he was carryin' me. [...] When I hear a junkie tell me he wants to kick the habit but he just can't I know he lies even if he don't know he does. He wants to carry the monkey, he's punishin' hisself for somethin' 'n don't even know it. [...] Then I got forty grains 'n went up to the room 'n went from monkey to nothin' in twenny-eight days 'n that's nine-ten years ago 'n the monkey's dead."
- 1938, Alfred R. Lindesmith, "Argot of the Underworld Drug Addict", Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, Vol. 29, Issue 2 (July-August):
Derived terms
Terms derived from monkey (noun)
- brass monkey
- Burmese snub-nosed monkey
- capuchin monkey
- code monkey
- grease monkey
- green monkey
- green monkey disease
- if you pay peanuts, you get monkeys
- I'll be a monkey's uncle
- leaf monkey
- make a monkey out of
- monkey apple
- monkey bag
- monkey barge
- monkey bars
- monkey bike
- monkey block
- monkey boat
- monkey boot
- monkey boy
- monkey bread
- monkey business
- monkey cup
- monkey dance
- monkey drill
- monkey engine
- monkey-faced owl
- monkey flip
- monkey flower
- monkey gaff
- monkey grass(Please check if this is already defined at target. Replace
{{vern}}
with a regular link if already defined. Add novern=1 if not defined.) - monkey hammer
- monkey humping a football
- monkey in the middle
- monkey jacket
- monkey man
- monkey meat
- monkey motion
- monkey nut
- monkey orange
- monkey orchid
- monkey pistol
- monkey pod
- monkey pole
- monkey pot
- monkey press
- monkey pump
- monkey puzzle
- monkey rum
- monkey script
- monkey see, monkey do
- monkeyshine
- monkey show
- monkey spar
- monkey spoon
- monkey squirrel
- monkey stove
- monkey tail
- monkey thorn
- monkey trial
- Monkey Ward's
- monkey wheel
- monkey wrench
- Myanmar snub-nosed monkey
- New World monkey
- not give a monkey's
- not your circus, not your monkeys
- Old World monkey
- phone monkey
- porch monkey
- powder monkey
- snow monkey
- spank the monkey
- the organ grinder, not the monkey
Descendants
Translations
primate
|
|
mischievous child
Verb
monkey (third-person singular simple present monkeys, present participle monkeying, simple past and past participle monkeyed or monkied)
- (intransitive, informal) To meddle; to mess with
- Please don't monkey with the controls if you don't know what you're doing.
- 1920, Peter B. Kyne, The Understanding Heart, Chapter XII
- “As an inventor,” Bob Mason suggested, “you're a howling success at shooting craps! […] Why monkey with weak imitations when you can come close to the original?”
- (transitive) To mimic; to ape.
- 2011, Elizabeth Mosier, The Playgroup (page 83)
- He winked at Liza, who monkeyed him, holding her own eye shut.
- 2011, Elizabeth Mosier, The Playgroup (page 83)
Derived terms
- monkey around
- monkey up
- spank the monkey
Translations
to meddle, mess with
|
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.