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Webster 1913 Edition
Rim
Rim
,Rim
,Webster 1828 Edition
Rim
RIM
,RIM
,Definition 2024
Rim
Rim
Serbo-Croatian
Proper noun
Rȋm m (Cyrillic spelling Ри̑м)
Declension
singular | |
---|---|
nominative | Rȋm |
genitive | Ríma |
dative | Rimu |
accusative | Rim |
vocative | Rime |
locative | Rimu |
instrumental | Rimom |
Slovene
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *Rimъ.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈrìːm/
- Tonal orthography: rím
Proper noun
Rím m inan (genitive Ríma)
Declension
singular | |
---|---|
nominative | Rím |
accusative | Rím |
genitive | Ríma |
dative | Rímu |
locative | Rímu |
instrumental | Rímom |
Related terms
- Rimljàn / Rimljánka
- rímski
rim
rim
English
Noun
rim (plural rims)
Translations
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See also
- (wheel rim): mag wheel, alloy wheel
Verb
rim (third-person singular simple present rims, present participle rimming, simple past and past participle rimmed) (transitive)
- To form a rim on.
- To follow the contours, possibly creating a circuit
- Palm trees rim the beach.
- A walking path rims the island.
- (of a ball) To roll around a rim.
- The golf ball rimmed the cup.
- The basketball rimmed in and out.
Translations
Etymology 2
From Middle English rim, rym, ryme, reme, from Old English rēoma (“membrane, ligament”), from Proto-Germanic *reumô (“belt, thong”), from Proto-Indo-European *rew- (“to tear, dig, gather”). Cognate with Dutch riem (“a thong”), German Riemen (“a thong, band”), Swedish rem (“a thong, strap”).
Noun
rim (plural rims)
- (Britain dialectal) A membrane.
- (Britain dialectal or obsolete) The membrane enclosing the intestines; the peritoneum, hence loosely, the intestines; the lower part of the abdomen; belly.
- 1599, Shakespeare, “Act IV, scene IV - Pistol to a captured French soldier from whom he wants a ransom and whom he does not understand”, in King Henry V:
- Moy shall not serve; I will have forty moys; / Or I will fetch thy rim out at thy throat / In drops of crimson blood.
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Etymology 3
From a variation of ream.
Verb
rim (third-person singular simple present rims, present participle rimming, simple past and past participle rimmed)
- (slang) to lick the anus of a partner as part of the sexual act.
- 2008, Lexy Harper, Bedtime Erotica for Freaks (Like Me), page 216
- When she started thrusting her hips back against his finger, he turned her over and rimmed her **** as he fingered her ****.
- 2008, Lexy Harper, Bedtime Erotica for Freaks (Like Me), page 216
Translations
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Anagrams
Danish
Etymology 1
From Old Norse hrím.
Noun
rim c (singular definite rimen, not used in plural form)
Etymology 2
From late Old Norse rím, from Middle Low German rim, from French rime (“rhyme”).
Noun
rim n (singular definite rimet, plural indefinite rim)
Inflection
External links
- rim on the Danish Wikipedia.Wikipedia da
Etymology 3
See rime.
Verb
rim
- imperative of rime
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology 1
From Old Norse rím and (Old?) French rime
Noun
rim n (definite singular rimet, indefinite plural rim, definite plural rima or rimene)
- a rhyme
Derived terms
Etymology 2
Noun
rim m (definite singular rimen, uncountable)
rim n (definite singular rimet, uncountable)
- rime (frost)
Derived terms
References
- “rim” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
From Old Norse rím and (Old?) French rime (sense 1), and Old Norse hrím (sense 2}
Noun
rim n (definite singular rimet, indefinite plural rim, definite plural rima)
Derived terms
References
- “rim” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
Old English
Etymology
Proto-Germanic *rīmą (“number, count, series”), from Proto-Indo-European *re(i)- (“to reason, count”). Akin to Old Frisian rīm, Old Saxon -rīm, Old High German rīm, Icelandic rím
Pronunciation
Noun
rīm n
- a number, counting, reckoning, numeral; calendar
- Rim miclade monna mægþe geond middan-geard — Cædmon’s Metrical Paraphrase
- sum; enumeration
Declension
Derived terms
- gerīm n. — A number, computation, measurement, calendar, diary
- rīman — to count, number; tell, enumerate, relate; account, esteem as
- rīmāþ m. — oath by a number of persons
- rīmbōc — calendar
- rīmcræft m. — arithmetic; calendar
- rīmcræftig — skilled in reckoning
- rīmcræftiga m. — one skilful at figures
- rīmgetæl, rīmgetel n. — number
- rīmre m. — reckoner, calculator
- rīmtæl n. — number
- rīmtalu f. number
Descendants
Portuguese
Etymology
Via Old Portuguese, from Latin rēn.
Pronunciation
Noun
rim m (plural rins)
- kidney
- (in the plural) small of the back
Swedish
Etymology
From Old Norse rím, from Proto-Germanic *rīmą.
Noun
rim n
Declension
See also
- rimma