cant
oxford
views updated May 23 2018cant1 / kant/ •
n. 1. hypocritical and sanctimonious talk, typically of a moral, religious, or political nature.2. [as adj.] denoting a phrase or catchword temporarily current or in fashion: they are misrepresented as, in the cant word of our day, uncaring. ∎ language peculiar to a specified group or profession and regarded with disparagement: thieves' cant.•
v. [intr.] dated talk hypocritically and sanctimoniously about something: if they'd stop canting about “honest work,” they might get somewhere.cant2 •
v. [tr.] cause (something) to be in a slanting or oblique position; tilt: he canted his head to look at the screen. ∎ [intr.] take or have a slanting position: mismatched slate roofs canted at all angles.•
n. 1. [in sing.] a slope or tilt: the outward cant of the curving walls.2. a wedge-shaped block of wood, esp. one remaining after the better-quality pieces have been cut off.
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
CANT
oxford
views updated May 17 2018CANT. The
JARGON of a class, group, or profession, often used to exclude or mislead others: a teenage gang member in
Los Angeles saying that he was in his
hoopty around
dimday when some
mud duck with a
trey-eight tried to
take him out of the box (he was in his car around dusk when a woman armed with a .38 calibre pistol tried to shoot him). Cant is a temporary form of language that changes quickly; when outsiders pick some of it up, the group evolves new usages. Expressions often move into the general language; cant terms that are now general
SLANG include
moniker name,
bilk to swindle,
beef a complaint/to complain, and
hit kill. See
ARGOT,
SHELTA.
Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language TOM McARTHUR
cant
oxford
views updated Jun 11 2018cant 2 (sl.) speak, talk, esp. in the whining fashion of beggars XVI; use the particular jargon of a class or set, affect religious or pietistic phraseology XVII. prob. — L.
cantāre sing (see
CHANT), which was applied contemptuously as early as XII to the singing in church services and perh. later to the speech of religious mendicants.
Hence
cant sb. XVII.
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD
cant
oxford
views updated May 09 2018cant The section of a
coppiced woodland that is cut in a particular year in the rotation. See also
COUPE and
HAG.
A Dictionary of Plant Sciences MICHAEL ALLABY
cant
oxford
views updated May 23 2018cant The section of a
coppiced woodland that is cut in a particular year in the rotation. See also
coupe and
hag.
A Dictionary of Ecology MICHAEL ALLABY
cant
oxford
views updated May 23 2018cant. 1. Angle or inclination of a piece, member, or plane to another, especially to the horizontal.
2. Oblique surface cutting off the corner of a square, or an oblique face of a polygon, hence a polygonal plan is
canted (e.g. canted
bay-window).
A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture JAMES STEVENS CURL
cant
oxford
views updated May 11 2018cant 1 †edge, border (?) XIV; nook, corner XVII; oblique line or face XIX. prob. — MLG.
kant point,
kante side, edge, (M)Du.
cant border, side, corner — Rom. *
canto, for L.
cant(h)us iron tire.
Hence
cant vb. bevel, slant, toss, tilt XVI; whence a new sb.
cant toss, slope, tilt XVIII.
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD