lamb
[ lam ]
/ læm /
noun
a young sheep.
the meat of a young sheep.
a person who is gentle, meek, innocent, etc.: Their little daughter is such a lamb.
a person who is easily cheated or outsmarted, especially an inexperienced speculator.
the Lamb,
Christ.
verb (used without object)
to give birth to a lamb.
Origin of lamb
before 900; Middle English, Old English; cognate with Dutch
lam, German
Lamm, Old Norse, Gothic
lamb; akin to Greek
élaphos deer. See
elk
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH lamb
lam lambWords nearby lamb
lamartine,
lamas,
lamasery,
lamaze,
lamaze method,
lamb,
lamb down,
lamb of god,
lamb shift,
lamb syndrome,
lamb's ears
Definition for lamb (2 of 2)
Lamb
[ lam ]
/ læm /
noun
CharlesElia,1775–1834,
English essayist and critic.
Harold A.,1892–1962,
U.S. novelist.
Mary Ann,1764–1847,
English author who wrote in collaboration with her brother Charles Lamb.
William, 2nd Viscount Melbourne,1779–1848,
English statesman: prime minister 1834, 1835–41.
Willis E(ugene), Jr.,1913–2008,
U.S. physicist: Nobel Prize 1955.
Example sentences from the Web for lamb
British Dictionary definitions for lamb (1 of 3)
lamb
/ (læm) /
noun
verb
See also
lamb down
Derived forms of lamb
lamblike, adjectiveWord Origin for lamb
Old English
lamb, from Germanic; compare German
Lamm, Old High German and Old Norse
lamb
British Dictionary definitions for lamb (2 of 3)
Lamb
1
/ (læm) /
noun
the Lamb
a title given to Christ in the New Testament
British Dictionary definitions for lamb (3 of 3)
Lamb
2
/ (læm) /
noun
Charles, pen name Elia. 1775–1834, English essayist and critic. He collaborated with his sister Mary on Tales from Shakespeare (1807). His other works include Specimens of English Dramatic Poets (1808) and the largely autobiographical essays collected in Essays of Elia (1823; 1833)
William. See (2nd Viscount) Melbourne 2
Willis Eugene. 1913–2008, US physicist. He detected the small difference in energy between two states of the hydrogen atom (Lamb shift). Nobel prize for physics 1955
Idioms and Phrases with lamb
lamb
see hanged for a sheep (as a lamb); in two shakes (of a lamb's tail); like a lamb to the slaughter.