block

/blɑk/

UK: /blɒk/

block

English Noun Top 1,823
American (Lessac) (medium)
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Definition

A substantial, often approximately cuboid, piece of any substance.

Etymology

From Middle English blok (“log, stump, solid piece”), from Old French bloc (“log, block”), from Middle Dutch blok (“treetrunk”), from Old Dutch *blok (“log”), from Proto-West Germanic *blokk, from Proto-Germanic *blukką (“beam, log”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰelǵ- (“thick plank, beam, pile, prop”). Cognate with Old Frisian blok, Old Saxon blok, Old High German bloh, bloc (“block”), Old English bolca (“gangway of a ship, plank”), Old Norse bǫlkr (“divider, partition”). More at balk. See also bloc, bulk.

Example Sentences

  • "a block of ice; a block of stone"
  • "She picked up the block and examined it."
  • "Anne Boleyn placed her head on the block and awaited her execution."
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