divot

[ div-uh t ]
/ ˈdɪv ət /

noun

Golf. a piece of turf gouged out with a club in making a stroke.
Scot. a piece of turf.

Origin of divot

1530–40; orig. Scots, earlier deva(i)t, diffat, duvat, of obscure origin

Example sentences from the Web for divot

  • Before applying for the job our young friend Foozle would like to know whether he will be required to replace the divot.

  • Scottish boys often weight it at the end with a "divot" which is a little piece of actual turf, both grass and root, all together.

    The Playwork Book |Ann Macbeth
  • Those who eat and chatter, kiss hands and smile, but never take a divot are losers of something that is heartening.

    The Happy Golfer |Henry Leach
  • He quietly lifted the lower edge of a divot on the roof, and peeped in to see what was going on.

    Gairloch In North-West Ross-Shire |John H. Dixon, F.S.A. Scot

British Dictionary definitions for divot

divot
/ (ˈdɪvət) /

noun

a piece of turf dug out of a grass surface, esp by a golf club or by horses' hooves

Word Origin for divot

C16: from Scottish, of obscure origin