trap
trap1 / trap/ • n. 1. a device or enclosure designed to catch and retain animals, typically by allowing entry but not exit or by catching hold of a part of the body. ∎ a curve in the waste pipe from a bathtub, sink, or toilet that is always full of liquid and prevents gases from coming up the pipe into the building. ∎ a container or device used to collect a specified thing: one fuel filter and water trap are sufficient on the fuel system. ∎ a bunker or other hollow on a golf course. ∎ the compartment from which a greyhound is released at the start of a race. ∎ fig. a trick by which someone is misled into giving themselves away or otherwise acting contrary to their interests or intentions: by keeping quiet I was walking into a trap. ∎ fig. an unpleasant situation from which it is hard to escape: they fell into the trap of relying too little on equity financing.2. a device for hurling an object such as a clay pigeon into the air to be shot at. ∎ (in the game of trapball) the shoe-shaped device that is hit with a bat to send the ball into the air.3. chiefly hist. a light, two-wheeled carriage pulled by a horse or pony.4. short for trapdoor.5. inf. a person's mouth (used in expressions to do with speaking): keep your trap shut!6. (usu. traps) inf. percussion instruments, typically in a jazz band.7. Baseball & Football an act of trapping the ball.• v. (trapped, trap·ping) [tr.] catch (an animal) in a trap. ∎ (often be trapped) prevent (someone) from escaping from a place: twenty workers were trapped by flames. ∎ have (something, typically a part of the body) held tightly by something so that it cannot move or be freed: he had trapped his finger in a spring-loaded hinge. ∎ induce (someone), by means of trickery or deception, to do something they would not otherwise want to do: I hoped to trap him into an admission. ∎ Baseball & Football catch (the ball) after it has briefly touched the ground. ∎ Soccer bring (the ball) under control with the feet or other part of the body on receiving it.DERIVATIVES: trap·like / -ˌlīk/ adj.
trap2 • v. (trapped , trap·ping ) [tr.] [usu. as adj.] (trapped) archaic put trappings on (a horse, etc.): gaily trapped mules.trap3 (also trap·rock) • n. basalt or a similar dark, fine-grained igneous rock.trap
trap
trap
So trap vb. OE. betreppan. trapper (-ER1) XVIII.
Trap
Trap ★★ L'Aventure Sauvage 1966
A trapper buys a mute girl as his wife. Together they try to make a life for themselves in the Canadian wilderness. Fine telling of interesting western tale. Unusual and realistic. 106m/C VHS . GB CA Rita Tushingham, Oliver Reed, Rex Sevenoaks; D: Sidney Hayers; C: Robert Krasker.