rocket

/ˈɹɑk.ɪt/

UK: /ˈɹɒk.ɪt/

ɹⱭK · ɪt (2 syllables)

English Noun Top 3,571
American (Lessac) (medium)
Female 0.7s
American (Amy) (medium)
Female 0.8s
American (Ryan) (medium)
Male 0.5s
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Definition

A projectile.

Etymology

From Italian rocchetta, from Old Italian rocchetto (“rocket”, literally “a bobbin”), diminutive of rocca (“a distaff”), from Lombardic rocko (“spinning wheel”), from Proto-West Germanic *rokkō, from Proto-Germanic *rukkô (“a distaff, a staff with flax fibres tied loosely to it, used in spinning thread”). Cognate with Old High German rocco, rocko, roccho, rocho ("a distaff"; > German Rocken (“a distaff”)), Swedish rock (“a distaff”), Icelandic rokkur (“a distaff”), Middle English rocke (“a distaff”). More at rock⁴. For the meaning development, compare fuselage, ultimately from Latin fūsus (“spindle, spinning wheel”).

Example Sentences

  • "Fernandinho launched a rocket that flew just over. Gundogan's shot hit off Sviatchenko and Gordon and went out. City pressed and pressed."
  • "The Burmese nurse who'd gone with her was crying, for which she'd no doubt get a rocket from matron."
  • "While Solborg and Lemaigre were dreaming of revolts, Donovan had learned of Solborg’s insubordination and meddling. He sent him a “rocket” ordering him out of North Africa and back to Lisbon at once."
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