Trap Definition

trăp
trapped, trapping, traps
noun
Any device for catching animals, as one that snaps shut tightly when stepped on, or a pitfall; gin, snare, etc.
Webster's New World
Any stratagem or ambush designed to catch or trick unsuspecting persons.
Webster's New World
A confining or undesirable circumstance from which escape or relief is difficult.
Fell into poverty's trap.
American Heritage
A device for sealing a passage against the escape of gases, especially a U-shaped or S-shaped bend in a drainpipe that prevents the return flow of sewer gas by means of a water barrier.
American Heritage
An apparatus for throwing disks into the air to be shot at in trapshooting.
Webster's New World
verb
trapped, trapping, traps
To catch in or as in a trap; entrap.
Webster's New World
To prevent from escaping or getting free.
Was trapped in the locked attic.
American Heritage
To hold back or seal off by a trap.
Webster's New World
To deceive or trick by means of a scheme or plan.
American Heritage
To cover, equip, or adorn with trappings; caparison.
Webster's New World
Antonyms:

Other Word Forms of Trap

Noun

Singular:
trap
Plural:
traps

Origin of Trap

  • Middle English trappe, from Old English træppe, treppe (“trap, snare”) (also in betræppan (“to trap”)) from Proto-Germanic *trap-. Akin to Old High German trappa, trapa (“trap, snare”), Middle Dutch trappe (“trap, snare”), Middle Low German treppe (“step, stair”) (German Treppe "step, stair"), Old English treppan (“to step, tread”) and possibly Albanian trap "raft, channel, path". Connection to "step" is "that upon which one steps". French trappe and Spanish trampa are ultimately borrowings from Germanic.

    From Wiktionary

  • Akin to Old English trappe (“trappings”), and perhaps from an Old French word of the same origin as English drab (“a kind of cloth”).

    From Wiktionary

  • Middle English trap trapping perhaps alteration of Old French drap cloth from Late Latin drappus

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

  • Swedish trapp from trappa step from Middle Low German trappe

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

  • From Swedish trapp, from trappa (“stair”).

    From Wiktionary

  • Middle English from Old English træppe

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

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