goal

[ gohl ]
See synonyms for: goalgoalsgoalless on Thesaurus.com

noun
  1. the result or achievement toward which effort is directed; aim; end: Her goal was clear—to get accepted to Yale.

  2. the terminal point in a race.

  1. a pole, line, or other marker by which such a point is indicated.

  2. an area, basket, cage, or other object or structure toward or into which players of various games attempt to throw, carry, kick, hit, or drive a ball, puck, etc., to score a point or points.

  3. the act of throwing, carrying, kicking, driving, etc., a ball or puck into such an area or object.

  4. the score made by this act.

  5. #goals, goals. (used especially as a hashtag in social media in reference to things or people one aspires to or wants to emulate): My #goals have been forever altered by your new #thinspo profile pic.Graduating debt-free is goals.Got my kids to eat their pizza without picking off the spinach and mushrooms. #nutrition #goals #mommy #doingitright

Origin of goal

1
First recorded in 1325–50; Middle English gol “boundary, limit”; further origin uncertain; compare Old English gǣlan “to hinder, impede”

word story For goal

Goal has no reliable etymology. It appears for the first and only time in Middle English as gol “boundary, limit” in the mid-14th century. Some authorities suggest that gol was a borrowing from Middle French gaule, waulle “pole, stick,” from an unattested Germanic cognate of Old Frisian waal, walu “rod,” which is of no real help. The second recorded occurrence of goal, then spelled gole, is in the first half of the 16th century, with the meaning “finishing point of a race, finish line.” The extended sense “aim or purpose, outcome of effort or ambition” also dates from the first half of the 16th century. By the late 16th century, goal, at this point spelled goale, had also acquired the meaning, now obsolete, “starting point of a race,” a translation of one of the many meanings of Latin fīnis (which also meant “boundary, limit” and “finishing point of a race, finish line”).

Other words for goal

Other words from goal

  • goal·less, adjective
  • sub·goal, noun

Words Nearby goal

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How to use goal in a sentence

British Dictionary definitions for goal

goal

/ (ɡəʊl) /


noun
  1. the aim or object towards which an endeavour is directed

  2. the terminal point of a journey or race

  1. (in various sports) the net, basket, etc into or over which players try to propel the ball, puck, etc, to score

  2. sport

    • a successful attempt at scoring

    • the score so made

  3. (in soccer, hockey, etc) the position of goalkeeper

Origin of goal

1
C16: perhaps related to Middle English gol boundary, Old English gǣlan to hinder, impede

Derived forms of goal

  • goalless, adjective

Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012