Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Mast
Mast
Mast
,Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the
Of some great ammiral.
Mast
,Webster 1828 Edition
Mast
M`AST
,M`AST
,Definition 2024
Mast
mast
mast
English
Noun
mast (plural masts)
- A tall, slim post or tower, usually tapering upward, used to support, for example, the sails on a ship, flags, floodlights, or communications equipment such as an aerial, usually supported by guy-wires.
- (naval) A non-judicial punishment ("NJP") disciplinary hearing under which a commanding officer studies and disposes of cases involving those under his command.
Hyponyms
- (tall, slim post to support the sails on a ship): foremast, mainmast, mizzenmast, topmast
Derived terms
Translations
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Verb
mast (third-person singular simple present masts, present participle masting, simple past and past participle masted)
- To supply and fit a mast to a ship
Translations
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See also
Etymology 2
Old English mæst (“fallen nuts, food for swine”), mæsten (“to fatten, feed”), from West Germanic; probably related to meat.
Noun
mast (plural masts)
- The fruit of forest-trees (beech, oak, chestnut, pecan, etc.), especially if having fallen from the tree, used as fodder for pigs and other animals.
- 1955, Robin Jenkins, The Cone-Gatherers, Canongate 2012, page 162:
- He […] would begin to pick up the seed-cases or mast, squeeze each one with his fingers to see if it were fertile, and drop it if it were not.
- (Can we date this quote?) Chapman
- Oak-mast, and beech, and cornel fruit, they eat.
- (Can we date this quote?) South
- Swine under an oak filling themselves with the mast.
- 1955, Robin Jenkins, The Cone-Gatherers, Canongate 2012, page 162:
Translations
Verb
mast (third-person singular simple present masts, present participle masting, simple past and past participle masted)
- (of swine and other animals) To feed on forest seed or fruit.
- (agriculture, forestry, ecology, of a population of plants) To vary fruit and seed production in multi-year cycles.
- 1985, Michael Fenner, Seed ecology, page 33:
- Any individual tree which masted in a generally non-mast year would be subjected to the exclusive attention of the seed predators and so would be selected against.
- 2004, Michael Scherer-Lorenzen, Christian Körner, Ernst-Detlef Schulze, Forest Diversity and Function: Temperate and Boreal Systems, page 28:
- However, if this were true, all or most masting species (e.g., Fagus and Quercus) in a forest would have to mast in synchrony to be effective against generalist herbivores.
- 2008, Chris Rowthorn, Muhammad Cohen, China Williams, Borneo, page 50:
- Because dipterocarp seeds are winged and spin gracefully as they fall, the dispersal of millions of dipterocarp seeds during a masting event is one of the greatest spectacles that you can see on planet Earth.
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Related terms
Anagrams
Czech
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *mastь.
Noun
mast f
Derived terms
- mastička f
Related terms
- mastit
- mastný
- mastnota
Dutch
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mɑst/
- Rhymes: -ɑst
Etymology 1
From Old Dutch *mast, from Proto-Germanic *mastaz.
Noun
mast m (plural masten, diminutive mastje n)
Derived terms
Etymology 2
Noun
mast m (plural masten, diminutive mastje n)
Anagrams
Estonian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmɑsʲt/
Etymology
From either Low German mast or German mast.
Noun
mast (genitive masti, partitive masti)
Declension
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | mast | mastid |
genitive | masti | mastide |
partitive | masti | maste / mastisid |
illative | masti / mastisse | mastidesse |
inessive | mastis | mastides |
elative | mastist | mastidest |
allative | mastile | mastidele |
adessive | mastil | mastidel |
ablative | mastilt | mastidelt |
translative | mastiks | mastideks |
terminative | mastini | mastideni |
essive | mastina | mastidena |
abessive | mastita | mastideta |
comitative | mastiga | mastidega |
Compounds
Kurdish
Noun
mast m
- yoghurt (a milk-based product thickened by a bacterium-aided curdling process)
This Kurdish entry was created from the translations listed at yoghurt. It may be less reliable than other entries, and may be missing parts of speech or additional senses. Please also see mast in the Kurdish Wiktionary. This notice will be removed when the entry is checked. (more information) April 2008
Middle French
Etymology
Proto-Germanic *mastaz
Noun
mast m (plural masts)
- mast (structure found on watercraft)
Descendants
- French: mât
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology 1
From Middle Low German mast (“mast”).
Noun
mast f, m (definite singular masta or masten, indefinite plural master, definite plural mastene)
Derived terms
- fokkemast
- stormast
- radiomast
- lysmast
Synonyms
References
- “mast” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Etymology 2
Alternative forms
Verb
mast
- past participle of mase
Old French
Etymology
Proto-Germanic *mastaz
Noun
mast m (oblique plural maz or matz, nominative singular maz or matz, nominative plural mast)
- mast (structure found on watercraft)
Descendants
Serbo-Croatian
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *mastь (Russian масть (mastʹ), Polish maść). Compare mazati.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mâːst/
Noun
mȃst f (Cyrillic spelling ма̑ст)
Declension
References
- “mast” in Hrvatski jezični portal