trapped

Variant of trap

trap definition

trap (trap)

noun

  1. any device for catching animals, as one that snaps shut tightly when stepped on, or a pitfall; gin, snare, etc.
  2. any stratagem or ambush designed to catch or trick unsuspecting persons
  3. any of various devices for preventing the escape of gas, offensive odors, etc.; specif., a -shaped or -shaped part of a drainpipe, in which standing water seals off sewer gas
  4. an apparatus for throwing disks into the air to be shot at in trapshooting
  5. a light, two-wheeled carriage with springs
  6. trapdoor
    1. a set of various percussion instruments, as cymbals, blocks, and bells, used with a set of drums, as in a jazz band
    2. these percussion instruments and the set of drums considered as a unit
  7. Slang the mouth, specif. as the organ of speech
  8. Golf sand trap

Etymology: ME trappe < OE træppe, akin to treppan, to step, Ger treppe, stairway < IE *dreb-, to run, step, trip (var. of base *drā-) > Pol drabina, ladder

transitive verb trapped, trapping trap′·ping

  1. to catch in or as in a trap; entrap
  2. to hold back or seal off by a trap
  3. to furnish with a trap or traps
  4. ☆ to catch (a batted ball in baseball or a thrown ball in football) just as it rebounds from the ground rather than just before it strikes the ground

intransitive verb

  1. to set traps for game
  2. ☆ to trap animals, esp. for their furs

Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2009 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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