palm
1
[ pahm ]
/ pɑm /
noun
verb (used with object)
Verb Phrases
palm off,
to dispose of by deception, trickery, or fraud; substitute (something) with intent to deceive: Someone had palmed off a forgery on the museum officials.
Idioms for palm
grease someone's palm,
to bribe: Before any work could begin, it was necessary to grease the superintendent's palm.
Also cross someone's palm.
Origin of palm
1
1300–50; < Latin
palma (cognate with Old English
folm hand); replacing Middle English
paume < Middle French < Latin
palma
Words nearby palm
pallidum,
pallium,
pallor,
pally,
pally up,
palm,
palm bay,
palm beach,
palm beach gardens,
palm berry,
palm cabbage
British Dictionary definitions for palm off (1 of 3)
palm off
verb (tr, adverb often foll by on)
to offer, sell, or spend fraudulently
to palm off a counterfeit coin
to divert in order to be rid of
I palmed the unwelcome visitor off on John
British Dictionary definitions for palm off (2 of 3)
palm
1
/ (pɑːm) /
noun
verb (tr)
to conceal in or about the hand, as in sleight-of-hand tricks
to touch or soothe with the palm of the hand
See also
palm off
Word Origin for palm
C14
paume, via Old French from Latin
palma; compare Old English
folm palm of the hand, Greek
palamē
British Dictionary definitions for palm off (3 of 3)
palm
2
/ (pɑːm) /
noun
any treelike plant of the tropical and subtropical monocotyledonous family Arecaceae (formerly Palmae or Palmaceae), usually having a straight unbranched trunk crowned with large pinnate or palmate leaves
a leaf or branch of any of these trees, a symbol of victory, success, etc
merit or victory
an emblem or insignia representing a leaf or branch worn on certain military decorations
Word Origin for palm
Old English, from Latin
palma, from the likeness of its spreading fronds to a hand; see
palm
1
Medical definitions for palm off
palm
[ päm ]
n.
The inner surface of the hand that extends from the wrist to the base of the fingers.
Idioms and Phrases with palm off (1 of 2)
palm off
Pass off by deception, substitute with intent to deceive, as in The salesman tried to palm off a zircon as a diamond, or The producer tried to palm her off as a star from the Metropolitan Opera. This expression alludes to concealing something in the palm of one's hand. It replaced the earlier palm on in the early 1800s.
Idioms and Phrases with palm off (2 of 2)
palm