Shuttlecock
WordNet
noun
(1) Badminton equipment consisting of a ball of cork or rubber with a crown of feathers
verb
(2) Send or toss to and fro, like a shuttlecock
WiktionaryText
Etymology
+ (from resemblance to a male bird's plume of tail feathers). Attested from 1522.
Noun
- A lightweight object that is conical in shape with a cork or rubber-covered nose, used in badminton as a ball is used in other racquet games.
- 1859, Ebenezer Landells, The boy's own toy-maker, page 122,
- The practice of the game in this country is to keep the shuttlecock in the air by striking it from one person to another.
- 1859, Ebenezer Landells, The boy's own toy-maker, page 122,
Quotations
- 1696, Pierre Nicole, Moral Essayes, Contain'd in Several Treatises on Many Important Duties, page 237,
- It is a Veſſel which muſt be filled with Sand to ballance it, otherwiſe it will overturn, and become the Shuttlecock of all ſort of Winds.
- 1851 — Herman Melville, Moby-Dick, ch 123
- In a severe gale like this, while the ship is but a tossed shuttlecock to the blast, it is by no means uncommon to see the needles in the compasses, at intervals, go round and round.
- 1897 — Henry James, What Maisie Knew, Ch. 2
- Crudely as they had calculated they were at first justified by the event: she was the little feathered shuttlecock they could fiercely keep flying between them.
- 1906 — Edith Nesbit, The Railway Children, ch 11
- Bobbie burned the feathers of the shuttlecock one by one under his nose,
- 1997, C. K. Scott-Moncrieff (trans.), Marcel Proust (auth.), Swann's Way, page 460,
- ... in front of which a little girl with reddish hair was playing with a shuttlecock;