trap
1
[ trap ]
/ træp /
noun
verb (used with object), trapped, trap·ping.
verb (used without object), trapped, trap·ping.
Origin of trap
1
before 1000; Middle English
trappe (noun),
trappen (v.), Old English
træppe (noun), cognate with Middle Dutch
trappe (Dutch
trap) trap, step, staircase; akin to Old English
treppan to tread, German
Treppe staircase
SYNONYMS FOR trap
1, 2 T
rap ,
pitfall ,
snare apply to literal or figurative contrivances for deceiving and catching animals or people. Literally, a
trap is a mechanical contrivance for catching animals, the main feature usually being a spring:
a trap baited with cheese for mice. Figuratively,
trap suggests the scheme of one person to take another by surprise and thereby gain an advantage:
a trap for the unwary. A
pitfall is (usually) a concealed pit arranged for the capture of large animals or of people who may fall into it; figuratively, it is any concealed danger, error, or source of disaster:
to avoid the pitfalls of life. A
snare is a device for entangling birds, rabbits, etc., with intent to capture; figuratively, it implies enticement and inveiglement:
the temptress' snare.
OTHER WORDS FROM trap
trap·like, adjectiveWords nearby trap
Example sentences from the Web for air-trap
It is, on the whole, advisable to make the pump of flint glass, or at all events the air-trap tube and the fall tubes.
On Laboratory Arts |Richard Threlfall
British Dictionary definitions for air-trap (1 of 3)
trap
1
/ (træp) /
noun
verb traps, trapping or trapped
Derived forms of trap
traplike, adjectiveWord Origin for trap
Old English
træppe; related to Middle Low German
trappe, Medieval Latin
trappa
British Dictionary definitions for air-trap (2 of 3)
trap
2
/ (træp) /
noun
an obsolete word for trappings (def. 2)
verb traps, trapping or trapped
(tr often foll by out)
to dress or adorn
See also
traps
Word Origin for trap
C11: probably from Old French
drap cloth
British Dictionary definitions for air-trap (3 of 3)
trap
3
traprock
/ (træp) /
noun
any fine-grained often columnar dark igneous rock, esp basalt
any rock in which oil or gas has accumulated
Word Origin for trap
C18: from Swedish
trappa stair (from its steplike formation); see
trap
1
Idioms and Phrases with air-trap
trap
see fall into a trap; mind like a steel trap.