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Bob   /bɑb/   Listen
noun
Bob  n.  
1.
Anything that hangs so as to play loosely, or with a short abrupt motion, as at the end of a string; a pendant; as, the bob at the end of a kite's tail. "In jewels dressed and at each ear a bob."
2.
A knot of worms, or of rags, on a string, used in angling, as for eels; formerly, a worm suitable for bait. "Or yellow bobs, turned up before the plow, Are chiefest baits, with cork and lead enow."
3.
A small piece of cork or light wood attached to a fishing line to show when a fish is biting; a float.
4.
The ball or heavy part of a pendulum; also, the ball or weight at the end of a plumb line.
5.
A small wheel, made of leather, with rounded edges, used in polishing spoons, etc.
6.
A short, jerking motion; act of bobbing; as, a bob of the head.
7.
(Steam Engine) A working beam.
8.
A knot or short curl of hair; also, a bob wig. "A plain brown bob he wore."
9.
A peculiar mode of ringing changes on bells.
10.
The refrain of a song. "To bed, to bed, will be the bob of the song."
11.
A blow; a shake or jog; a rap, as with the fist.
12.
A jeer or flout; a sharp jest or taunt; a trick. "He that a fool doth very wisely hit, Doth very foolishly, although he smart, Not to seem senseless of the bob."
13.
A shilling. (Slang, Eng.)



verb
Bob  v. t.  (past & past part. bobbed; pres. part. bobbing)  
1.
To cause to move in a short, jerking manner; to move (a thing) with a bob. "He bobbed his head."
2.
To strike with a quick, light blow; to tap. "If any man happened by long sitting to sleep... he was suddenly bobbed on the face by the servants."
3.
To cheat; to gain by fraud or cheating; to filch. "Gold and jewels that I bobbed from him."
4.
To mock or delude; to cheat. "To play her pranks, and bob the fool, The shrewish wife began."
5.
To cut short; as, to bob the hair, or a horse's tail.



Bob  v. i.  
1.
To have a short, jerking motion; to play to and fro, or up and down; to play loosely against anything. "Bobbing and courtesying."
2.
To angle with a bob. See Bob, n., 2 & 3. "He ne'er had learned the art to bob For anything but eels."
To bob at an apple, To bob at a cherry, etc. to attempt to bite or seize with the mouth an apple, cherry, or other round fruit, while it is swinging from a string or floating in a tug of water.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Bob" Quotes from Famous Books



... high overhead, or rowed their way on with long slow strokes of their great wings, or danced their strange reels and cotillions in the twilight; and from the myriad voices of curlew, plover, gopher, bob-o-link, meadowlark, dick-cissel, killdeer and the rest—day-sounds and night-sounds, dawn-sounds and dusk-sounds—more inspiration than did the stolid Dutch boy plodding west across Iowa that spring of 1855, ...
— Vandemark's Folly • Herbert Quick

... since been told that I was misinformed as to the burial-place of Bob Roy; if so, I may plead in excuse that I wrote on apparently good authority, namely, that of a well-educated lady, who lived at the head of the Lake, within a mile, or less, of the point indicated as containing the remains of one so famous in that neighbourhood. [Note prefixed.—The history ...
— The Prose Works of William Wordsworth • William Wordsworth

... Tom. "That grand beauty of a young lady, the pride of the school? Why, everybody is talking about her. At the boys' school they've caught sight of her, and there isn't a boy that hasn't fallen in love with her. They all slink behind the wall, and bob up as she comes by. You don't mean that she's ...
— The Rebel of the School • Mrs. L. T. Meade

... for'ard, sir, and see what ails Bob—young Mr Manners, I mean, sir?" said a voice which the skipper recognised as belonging to one of the seamen. "He's on the fo'c's'le-head, a cussing and carrying on as if he was mad, sir; and two of the hands is holding him down so's he ...
— The Missing Merchantman • Harry Collingwood

... near, making his way savagely towards the stables, there thrust himself in the way Bob Woodfall, the good-natured champion of the village—six feet two inches and fourteen stone of bone and muscle, good cricket and five years' war record, dressed in country-made flannels, ready for his place in the ...
— Ambrotox and Limping Dick • Oliver Fleming


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