sidearm

EnglishEdit

EtymologyEdit

side +‎ arm

NounEdit

sidearm (plural sidearms)

  1. A personal weapon, such as a handgun or sword, carried on the hip in a belt, sheath, holster, etc., for rapid access.

VerbEdit

sidearm (third-person singular simple present sidearms, present participle sidearming, simple past and past participle sidearmed)

  1. To throw a ball with one's arm roughly parallel to the ground.
    • 2009 March 19, Ben Shpigel, “Medicine’s Loss Could Be the Mets’ Gain”, in New York Times[1]:
      His interest, aside from slinging sinkers as a sidearming right-hander, was medicine.

Derived termsEdit

AdverbEdit

sidearm (comparative more sidearm, superlative most sidearm)

  1. With one's arm roughly parallel to the ground.

Further readingEdit

AnagramsEdit

PortugueseEdit

EtymologyEdit

Unadapted borrowing from English sidearm.

NounEdit

sidearm m (plural sidearms)

  1. (ultimate frisbee) sidearm