shaft
[ shaft, shahft ]
/ ʃæft, ʃɑft /
noun
verb (used with object)
to push or propel with a pole: to shaft a boat through a tunnel.
Informal.
to treat in a harsh, unfair, or treacherous manner.
Origin of shaft
before 1000; Middle English; Old English
sceaft; cognate with German
Schaft; compare Latin
scāpus shaft, Greek
skêptron
scepter
OTHER WORDS FROM shaft
shaft·less, adjective shaft·like, adjective sub·shaft, noun un·shaft·ed, adjectiveWords nearby shaft
shadwell,
shady,
shaef,
shaffer,
shafiʿi,
shaft,
shaft alley,
shaft feather,
shaft grave,
shaft horsepower,
shaft house
Example sentences from the Web for shaft
British Dictionary definitions for shaft
shaft
/ (ʃɑːft) /
noun
verb
slang
to have sexual intercourse with (a woman)
slang
to trick or cheat
Word Origin for shaft
Old English
sceaft; related to Old Norse
skapt, German
Schaft, Latin
scāpus shaft, Greek
skeptron
sceptre, Lettish
skeps javelin
Medical definitions for shaft
shaft
[ shăft ]
n.
An elongated rodlike structure, such as the midsection of a long bone.
The section of a hair projecting from the surface of the body.