cane
Americannoun
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a stick or short staff used to assist one in walking; walking stick.
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a long, hollow or pithy, jointed woody stem, as that of bamboo, rattan, sugarcane, and certain palms.
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a plant having such a stem.
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split rattan woven or interlaced for chair seats, wickerwork, etc.
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any of several tall bamboolike grasses, especially of the genus Arundinaria, as A. gigantea cane reed, large cane, giant cane, or southern cane and A. tecta small cane, or switch cane, of the southern United States.
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the stem of a raspberry or blackberry.
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a rod used for flogging.
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a slender cylinder or rod, as of sealing wax or glass.
verb (used with object)
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to flog with a cane.
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to furnish or make with cane.
to cane chairs.
noun
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the long jointed pithy or hollow flexible stem of the bamboo, rattan, or any similar plant
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any plant having such a stem
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strips of such stems, woven or interlaced to make wickerwork, the seats and backs of chairs, etc
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( as modifier )
a cane chair
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the woody stem of a reed, young grapevine, blackberry, raspberry, or loganberry
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any of several grasses with long stiff stems, esp Arundinaria gigantea of the southeastern US
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a flexible rod with which to administer a beating as a punishment, as to schoolboys
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a slender rod, usually wooden and often ornamental, used for support when walking; walking stick
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See sugar cane
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a slender rod or cylinder, as of glass
verb
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to whip or beat with or as if with a cane
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to make or repair with cane
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informal to defeat
we got well caned in the match
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slang to do something with great power, force, or speed or consume something such as alcohol in large quantities
you can do it in ten minutes if you really cane it
noun
Other Word Forms
- canelike adjective
- caner noun
- cany adjective
- recane verb (used with object)
- uncaned adjective
Etymology
Origin of cane
First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English, from Middle French, from Latin canna, from Greek kánna, from Semitic; compare Akkadian qanū, Hebrew qāneh “reed”
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
When I got the assignment, I was immediately excited and had this image in my head of placing them inside a colorful candy cane circus.
From Los Angeles Times
Her family grew increasingly alarmed, but Schmidt refused to use a walker or a cane, blaming the falls on outside causes like uneven ground.
Daniel Akst considered himself far too young and fit for a cane.
I’d never had an episode quite like this, but my wife Louise is no stranger to back troubles, and she offered to loan me the cane she occasionally uses.
Shannon, who worked as an IRS clerk and did filing and other tasks at Goldrich in a job funded partly by the city’s Department of Aging, uses a cane because of hip and knee problems.
From Los Angeles Times
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.