Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

flint

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Remove ads
See also: Flint

English

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia
 flint on Wikipedia

Etymology

From Middle English flynt, flint, from Old English flint, from Proto-West Germanic *flint, from Proto-Germanic *flintaz (compare Dutch vlint, flint (flint, cobblestone), German Flins, Flint (flint, pebble), Danish flint (flint)), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)plind- (to split, cleave) (compare Irish slinn (slate, shingle), Ancient Greek πλίνθος (plínthos)), from *(s)pley- (to split). More at split.

Pronunciation

Noun

flint (countable and uncountable, plural flints)

  1. A hard, fine-grained quartz that fractures conchoidally and generates sparks when struck against a material such as steel, because tiny chips of the steel are heated to incandescence and burn in air.
    He used flint to make a fire.
    • 1840, Philosophical Magazine, page 365:
      Some of the enormous fragments of chalk which are interstratified with drift have not only layers of undisturbed flints, but also sandpipes in the middle of them, or cylindrical cavities filled with sand and gravel []
    • 1916, Allen Jesse Reynolds, Wilson Straley, The Archaeological Bulletin, volumes 7-9, page 3:
      In a cornfield on one side flakings of flint are numerous.
  2. A piece of flint, such as a gunflint, used to produce a spark by striking it with a firestriker.
  3. A small cylinder of some other material of the same function in a cigarette lighter, etc.
  4. A type of maize/corn with a hard outer hull.
  5. (figurative) Anything figuratively hard.

Derived terms

Translations

The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

See also

Verb

flint (third-person singular simple present flints, present participle flinting, simple past and past participle flinted)

  1. (transitive) To furnish or decorate an object with flint.
    • 1907, Barbara Baynton, “Human Toll”, in Sally Krimmer, Alan Lawson, editors, Barbara Baynton: Bush Studies, Other Stories, Human Toll, Verse, Essays and Letters (Portable Australian Authors; UQP Australian Authors), St. Lucia, Qld.: University of Queensland Press, published 1980, →ISBN, →ISSN, page 147:
      No schoolboys lingered round Bob Robertson's (yclept Roberson's) blacksmith's shop, for this sleepy day no lusty throat bellowed attention to the flaming tongues fanned from its bloodily blazing teeth; no luminous stars flinted from the clanking anvil.
    • 1908, Gerda Dalliba, “[An Earth Poem] Children of Sod (Morning)”, in An Earth Poem and Other Poems, New York, N.Y.; London: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, The Knickerbocker Press, page 33:
      No change from the primordial doth appear, / Within the earth’s rotation of the year, / Nor are ye heirless of her sane decree, / The problem is potentiality / Of Spring and Autumn, burdenful with Fate, / Upon the seeds of labour ye must wait, / Sowing the Consequence by which ye came, / Flinting the fire not to fire but flame, / With all the end of Destiny the same!
    • 2005 January 14, Anne Goodwin Sides, “Rocky Mountain High Life”, in The New York Times:
      The sun had warmed the air to a balmy 45 degrees and sent sparks flinting off the bleachy white snow.

Further reading

Remove ads

French

Noun

flint m (plural flints)

  1. flint glass

Middle English

Noun

flint

  1. alternative form of flynt

Old English

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *flint, from Proto-Germanic *flintaz

Pronunciation

Noun

flint m

  1. (stone) flint

Declension

Strong a-stem:

More information singular, plural ...

Derived terms

Remove ads

Polish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈflint/
  • Rhymes: -int
  • Syllabification: flint

Noun

flint f

  1. genitive plural of flinta

Swedish

Etymology 1

Clipping of flintskalle.

Noun

flint c

  1. a bald head (or bald portion of the head)
    Vilken flint han har fått!
    My God, he has balded!
Declension
More information nominative, genitive ...

Etymology 2

Clipping of flintskallig.

Adjective

flint (comparative mer flint, superlative mest flint)

  1. (colloquial) bald (having a bald head)
    Synonyms: (colloquial) flintis, flintskallig
Declension
More information Indefinite, positive ...

1 The indefinite superlative forms are only used in the predicative.
2 Dated or archaic.
3 Only used, optionally, to refer to things whose natural gender is masculine.

See also

References

Remove ads

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads