• Chest

    Pronunciation

    • IPA: /t͡ʃɛst/
    • Rhymes: -É›st

    Origin 1

    From Middle English cheste, chiste, from Old English ċest, ċist ("chest, casket; coffin; rush basket; box"), from Proto-Germanic *kistō ("chest, box"), from Latin cista ("chest, box"), from Ancient Greek κίστη (kistē, "chest, box, basket, hamper"), from Proto-Indo-European *kisteh₂ ("woven container"). Germanic cognates include Scots kist ("chest, box, trunk, coffer"), West Frisian kiste ("box, chest"), Dutch kist ("box, case, chest, coffin"), German Kiste ("box, crate, case, chest").

    Alternative forms

    Full definition of chest

    Noun

    chest

    (plural chests)
    1. A box, now usually a large strong box with a secure convex lid.
      The clothes are kept in a chest.
      • 1879, Richard Jefferies, The Amateur Poacher Chapter 1, But then I had the massive flintlock by me for protection. ¶...The linen-press and a chest on the top of it formed, however, a very good gun-carriage; and, thus mounted, aim could be taken out of the window at the old mare feeding in the meadow below by the brook,....
    2. (obsolete) A coffin.
    3. The place in which public money is kept; a treasury.
      You can take the money from the chest.
    4. A chest of drawers.
    5. (thorax)(anatomy) The portion of the front of the human body from the base of the neck to the top of the abdomen; the thorax. Also the analogous area in other animals.
      She had a sudden pain in her chest.
    6. A hit or blow made with one's chest (the front of one's body).
      He scored with a chest into the goal.

    Synonyms

    Verb

    1. To hit with one's chest (front of one's body)
      • 2011, January 23, Alistair Magowan, Blackburn 2 - 0 West Brom, Pedersen fed Kalinic in West Brom's defensive third and his chested lay-off was met on the burst by the Canadian who pelted by Tamas and smashed the ball into the top of Myhill's net.
    2. (transitive) To deposit in a chest.
    3. (transitive, obsolete) To place in a coffin.
      • Bible, Genesis 1. 26He dieth and is chested.

    Origin 2

    From Middle English cheste, cheeste, cheaste, from Old English ċēast, ċēas ("strife, quarrel, quarrelling, contention, murmuring, sedition, scandal; reproof"). Related to Old Frisian kāse ("strife, contention"), Old Saxon caest ("quarrel, dispute"), Old High German kōsa ("speech, story, account").

    Noun

    chest

    (plural chests)
    1. Debate; quarrel; strife; enmity.

    Anagrams

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