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Horn   /hɔrn/   Listen
noun
Horn  n.  
1.
A hard, projecting, and usually pointed organ, growing upon the heads of certain animals, esp. of the ruminants, as cattle, goats, and the like. The hollow horns of the Ox family consist externally of true horn, and are never shed.
2.
The antler of a deer, which is of bone throughout, and annually shed and renewed.
3.
(Zool.) Any natural projection or excrescence from an animal, resembling or thought to resemble a horn in substance or form; esp.:
(a)
A projection from the beak of a bird, as in the hornbill.
(b)
A tuft of feathers on the head of a bird, as in the horned owl.
(c)
A hornlike projection from the head or thorax of an insect, or the head of a reptile, or fish.
(d)
A sharp spine in front of the fins of a fish, as in the horned pout.
4.
(Bot.) An incurved, tapering and pointed appendage found in the flowers of the milkweed (Asclepias).
5.
Something made of a horn, or in resemblance of a horn; as:
(a)
A wind instrument of music; originally, one made of a horn (of an ox or a ram); now applied to various elaborately wrought instruments of brass or other metal, resembling a horn in shape. "Wind his horn under the castle wall." See French horn, under French.
(b)
A drinking cup, or beaker, as having been originally made of the horns of cattle. "Horns of mead and ale."
(c)
The cornucopia, or horn of plenty. See Cornucopia. "Fruits and flowers from Amalthaea's horn."
(d)
A vessel made of a horn; esp., one designed for containing powder; anciently, a small vessel for carrying liquids. "Samuel took the hornof oil and anointed him (David)."
(e)
The pointed beak of an anvil.
(f)
The high pommel of a saddle; also, either of the projections on a lady's saddle for supporting the leg.
(g)
(Arch.) The Ionic volute.
(h)
(Naut.) The outer end of a crosstree; also, one of the projections forming the jaws of a gaff, boom, etc.
(i)
(Carp.) A curved projection on the fore part of a plane.
(j)
One of the projections at the four corners of the Jewish altar of burnt offering. "Joab... caught hold on the horns of the altar."
6.
One of the curved ends of a crescent; esp., an extremity or cusp of the moon when crescent-shaped. "The moon Wears a wan circle round her blunted horns."
7.
(Mil.) The curving extremity of the wing of an army or of a squadron drawn up in a crescentlike form. "Sharpening in mooned horns Their phalanx."
8.
The tough, fibrous material of which true horns are composed, being, in the Ox family, chiefly albuminous, with some phosphate of lime; also, any similar substance, as that which forms the hoof crust of horses, sheep, and cattle; as, a spoon of horn.
9.
(Script.) A symbol of strength, power, glory, exaltation, or pride. "The Lord is... the horn of my salvation."
10.
An emblem of a cuckold; used chiefly in the plural. "Thicker than a cuckold's horn."
11.
The telephone; as, on the horn. (slang)
12.
A body of water shaped like a horn; as, the Golden Horn in Istanbul.
Horn block, the frame or pedestal in which a railway car axle box slides up and down; also called horn plate.
Horn of a dilemma. See under Dilemma.
Horn distemper, a disease of cattle, affecting the internal substance of the horn.
Horn drum, a wheel with long curved scoops, for raising water.
Horn lead (Chem.), chloride of lead.
Horn maker, a maker of cuckolds. (Obs.)
Horn mercury. (Min.) Same as Horn quicksilver (below).
Horn poppy (Bot.), a plant allied to the poppy (Glaucium luteum), found on the sandy shores of Great Britain and Virginia; called also horned poppy.
Horn pox (Med.), abortive smallpox with an eruption like that of chicken pox.
Horn quicksilver (Min.), native calomel, or bichloride of mercury.
Horn shell (Zool.), any long, sharp, spiral, gastropod shell, of the genus Cerithium, and allied genera.
Horn silver (Min.), cerargyrite.
Horn slate, a gray, siliceous stone.
To pull in one's horns, To haul in one's horns, to withdraw some arrogant pretension; to cease a demand or withdraw an assertion. (Colloq.)
To raise the horn, or To lift the horn (Script.), to exalt one's self; to act arrogantly. "'Gainst them that raised thee dost thou lift thy horn?"
To take a horn, to take a drink of intoxicating liquor. (Low)



verb
Horn  v. t.  
1.
To furnish with horns; to give the shape of a horn to.
2.
To cause to wear horns; to cuckold. (Obs.)






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Horn" Quotes from Famous Books



... removed his Court from Constantinople. His beautiful capital city by the Golden Horn was in disgrace, on account of the growing disaffection of its populace and the frequent mutinies of its garrison. For the wars of Sultan Mahomet against the Republic of Venice were increasingly unpopular in his capital, whose treasuries were being drained to ...
— A Book of Quaker Saints • Lucy Violet Hodgkin

... Even when the hunting-horn sounded Rabbit remained quite without fear among his companions. They watched over him and he watched over them. One day a pack of hounds drew near to him, but fled again when they saw the wolf. Another time a cat ...
— Romance of the Rabbit • Francis Jammes

... husband was right, but still she felt indignant at the outrage committed on her geese. She did not, however, say anything about suing the shoemaker—for old Brindle's head, from which the horn had been knocked off, was not yet entirely well, and one prosecution very naturally suggested the idea of another. So she took her three fat geese, and after stripping off their feathers, had ...
— Friends and Neighbors - or Two Ways of Living in the World • Anonymous

... toads in their shield, instead of which they afterwards placed three FLEURS-DE-LIS on a blue field; this antique tapestry is said to have been taken from a King of France, while the English were masters there. We were shown here, among other things, the horn of a unicorn, of above eight spans and a half in length, valued at above 10,000 pounds; the bird of paradise, three spans long, three fingers broad, having a blue bill of the length of half an inch, the ...
— Travels in England and Fragmenta Regalia • Paul Hentzner and Sir Robert Naunton

... with all the phenomena of life in the bygone ages. We are brought in contact with actual flesh-and-blood men and women, not the ghostly outline figures which pass for such, in what is called History. The horn lantern of the biographer, by the aid of which, with painful minuteness, he chronicled, from day to day, his own outgoings and incomings, making visible to us his pitiful wants, labors, trials, and tribulations of the stomach and of the conscience, ...
— The Complete Works of Whittier - The Standard Library Edition with a linked Index • John Greenleaf Whittier


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