trapping


Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
trap1
noun
  • 1 a device or enclosure designed to catch and retain animals.
  • 2 an unpleasant situation from which it is hard to escape.

    ■ a trick betraying someone into acting contrary to their interests or intentions.

  • 3 a container or device used to collect a specified thing.

    ■ a curve in the waste pipe from a bath, basin, or toilet that is always full of liquid to prevent the upward passage of gases.

  • 4 a bunker or other hollow on a golf course.
  • 5 the compartment from which a greyhound is released at the start of a race.
  • 6 a device for hurling an object such as a clay pigeon into the air to be shot at.
  • 7 a light, two-wheeled carriage pulled by a horse or pony.
  • 8 informal a person's mouth: keep your trap shut!
  • 9 (traps) informal (among jazz musicians) drums or percussion instruments.
verb (traps, trapping, trapped)
  • 1 catch (an animal) in a trap.
  • 2 prevent from escaping.

    ■ catch (something) somewhere so that it cannot be freed.

  • 3 trick into doing something.
– derivatives
trap-like adjective.
– origin OE træppe (in coltetræppe ‘Christ's thorn’); rel. to MDu. trappe and med. L. trappa, of uncertain origin.



Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
trap2
verb (traps, trapping, trapped) (usu. as adj. trapped) archaic put trappings on (a horse).
– origin ME: from the obs. noun trap ‘trappings’, from OFr. drap ‘drape’.



Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
trap3 (also traprock)
noun N. Amer. basalt or a similar dark, fine-grained igneous rock.
– origin C18: from Swed. trapp, from trappa ‘stair’ (because of the often stair-like appearance of its outcroppings).
'trapping' also found in these Oxford entries:

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