arm
1
[ ahrm ]
/ ɑrm /
noun
Idioms for arm
Origin of arm
1
before 900; Middle English; Old English
earm; cognate with Gothic
arms, Old Norse
armr, Old Frisian
erm, Dutch, Old Saxon, Old High German
arm (German
Arm) arm; Latin
armus, Serbo-Croatian
rȁme,
rȁmo shoulder; akin to Sanskrit
īrmá, Avestan
arəma-, OPruss
irmo arm; not akin to Latin
arma
arm2
OTHER WORDS FROM arm
armed, adjective arm·like, adjectiveWORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH arm
alms armsWords nearby arm
British Dictionary definitions for arm in arm (1 of 3)
arm
1
/ (ɑːm) /
noun
verb
(tr) archaic
to walk arm in arm with
Derived forms of arm
armless, adjective armlike, adjectiveWord Origin for arm
Old English; related to German
Arm, Old Norse
armr arm, Latin
armus shoulder, Greek
harmos joint
British Dictionary definitions for arm in arm (2 of 3)
arm
2
/ (ɑːm) /
verb (tr)
to equip with weapons as a preparation for war
to provide (a person or thing) with something that strengthens, protects, or increases efficiency
he armed himself against the cold
- to activate (a fuse) so that it will explode at the required time
- to prepare (an explosive device) for use by introducing a fuse or detonator
nautical
to pack arming into (a sounding lead)
noun
(usually plural)
a weapon, esp a firearm
See also
arms
Word Origin for arm
C14: (n) back formation from
arms, from Old French
armes, from Latin
arma; (vb) from Old French
armer to equip with arms, from Latin
armāre, from
arma arms, equipment
British Dictionary definitions for arm in arm (3 of 3)
ARM
abbreviation for
adjustable rate mortgage
Medical definitions for arm in arm
arm
[ ärm ]
n.
An upper limb of the human body, connecting the hand and wrist to the shoulder.
Idioms and Phrases with arm in arm (1 of 2)
arm in arm
With one person's arm linked around another's; also, closely allied or intimate, as in Both couples walked arm in arm around the grounds of the estate, and This candidate is arm in arm with the party's liberal wing. The literal expression dates from the late 1300s, when Chaucer so used it: “They went arm in arm together into the garden” (Troilus and Cressida). The figurative usage dates from about 1600. Also see hand in hand.
Idioms and Phrases with arm in arm (2 of 2)
arm