saddle
Americannoun
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a seat for a rider on the back of a horse or other animal.
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a similar seat on a bicycle, tractor, etc.
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a part of a harness laid across the back of an animal and girded under the belly, to which the terrets and checkhook are attached.
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something resembling a saddle in shape, position, or function.
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the part of the back of an animal where a saddle is placed.
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(of mutton, venison, lamb, etc.) a cut comprising both loins.
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this cut, trimmed and prepared for roasting.
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(of poultry) the posterior part of the back.
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a ridge connecting two higher elevations.
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the covering of a roof ridge.
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a raised piece of flooring between the jambs of a doorway.
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an inverted bracket bearing on the axle of a railroad car wheel as a support for the car body.
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Ordnance. the support for the trunnion on some gun carriages.
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Machinery. a sliding part for spanning a space or other parts to support something else, as the cross slide and toolholder of a lathe.
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a strip of leather, often of a contrasting color, sewn on the vamp or instep of a shoe and extending to each side of the shank.
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Ceramics. a bar of refractory clay, triangular in section, for supporting one side of an object being fired.
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(in a suspension bridge) a member at the top of a tower for supporting a cable.
verb (used with object)
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to put a saddle on.
to saddle a horse.
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to load or charge, as with a burden.
He has saddled himself with a houseful of impecunious relatives.
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to impose as a burden or responsibility.
verb (used without object)
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to put a saddle on a horse (often followed byup ).
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to mount into the saddle (often followed byup ).
idioms
noun
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a seat for a rider, usually made of leather, placed on a horse's back and secured with a girth under the belly
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a similar seat on a bicycle, tractor, etc, made of leather or steel
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a back pad forming part of the harness of a packhorse
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anything that resembles a saddle in shape, position, or function
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a cut of meat, esp mutton, consisting of part of the backbone and both loins
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the part of a horse or similar animal on which a saddle is placed
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the part of the back of a domestic chicken that is nearest to the tail
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civil engineering a block on top of one of the towers of a suspension bridge that acts as a bearing surface over which the cables or chains pass
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engineering the carriage that slides on the bed of a lathe and supports the slide rest, tool post, or turret
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the nontechnical name for clitellum
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another name for col
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a raised piece of wood or metal for covering a doorsill
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in a position of control
verb
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(sometimes foll by up) to put a saddle on (a horse)
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(intr) to mount into the saddle
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(tr) to burden; charge
I didn't ask to be saddled with this job
Other Word Forms
- resaddle verb
- saddle-like adjective
- saddleless adjective
- saddlelike adjective
Etymology
Origin of saddle
First recorded before 900; Middle English noun sadel, saddul, Old English sadol; cognate with German Sattel, Old Norse sǫthull; akin to Latin sella (from unattested sedla ) “seat, stool, chair”; Middle English verb sad(e)len, Old English sadolian, derivative of the noun; sit 1
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.
But how on earth can I pursue my investigation if I’m saddled with work in this peculiar mansion?
From Literature
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He’s saddled with a large bag of receipts that is his job to sort through — a perfect symbol of the domestic wreckage that’s still in need of a thorough accounting.
From Los Angeles Times
The deal would saddle Paramount with more than $60 billion of debt — which Warner board members have argued may be untenable.
From Los Angeles Times
He still had all his tack on him from the trail ride—his reins, saddle, stirrups, bridle, and bit.
From Literature
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With Venezuela saddled with about $160 billion in outstanding national debts, she also put a high priority on reintegrating into the global capitalist order that her government had long shunned.
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.