don








noun

  1. (initial capital letter) Mr.; Sir: a Spanish title prefixed to a man’s given name.
  2. (in Spanish-speaking countries) a lord or gentleman.
  3. (initial capital letter) an Italian title of address, especially for a priest.
  4. a person of great importance.
  5. (in the English universities) a head, fellow, or tutor of a college.
  6. (in the Mafia) a head of a family or syndicate.

verb (used with object), donned, don·ning.

  1. to put on or dress in: to don one’s clothes.

conjunction

  1. (in prescriptions) donec.

noun

  1. a river flowing generally S from Tula in the Russian Federation in Europe, to the Sea of Azov. About 1200 miles (1930 km) long.
  2. a river in NE Scotland, flowing E from Aberdeen county to the North Sea. 62 miles (100 km) long.
  3. a river in central England, flowing NE from S Yorkshire to the Humber estuary. 60 miles (97 km) long.
  4. a male given name, form of Donald.

noun Welsh Mythology.

  1. a goddess, the mother of Gwydion and Arianrod: corresponds to the Irish Danu.

noun

  1. DonaldDon, born 1946, U.S. swimmer.

noun

  1. Donald FrancisDon, born 1930, U.S. football coach.

noun

  1. Donald EugeneDon, 1936–95, U.S. jazz trumpeter.

verb dons, donning or donned

  1. (tr) to put on (clothing)

noun

  1. British a member of the teaching staff at a university or college, esp at Oxford or Cambridge
  2. the head of a student dormitory at certain Canadian universities and colleges
  3. a Spanish gentleman or nobleman
  4. (in the Mafia) the head of a family

noun

  1. a Spanish title equivalent to Mr : placed before a name to indicate respect

noun

  1. a river rising in W Russia, southeast of Tula and flowing generally south, to the Sea of Azov: linked by canal to the River Volga. Length: 1870 km (1162 miles)
  2. a river in NE Scotland, rising in the Cairngorm Mountains and flowing east to the North Sea. Length: 100 km (62 miles)
  3. a river in N central England, rising in S Yorkshire and flowing northeast to the Humber. Length: about 96 km (60 miles)

noun plural -ries

  1. any of several trees of the rosaceous genus Prunus, such as P. avium (sweet cherry), having a small fleshy rounded fruit containing a hard stoneSee also bird cherry
  2. the fruit or wood of any of these trees
  3. any of various unrelated plants, such as the ground cherry and Jerusalem cherry
    1. a bright red colour; cerise
    2. (as adjective)a cherry coat
  4. slang virginity or the hymen as its symbol
  5. (modifier) of or relating to the cherry fruit or woodcherry tart
n.

1520s, from Spanish or Portuguese don, title of respect, from Latin dominus “lord, master.” The university sense is c.1660, originally student slang; underworld sense is 1952, from Italian don, from Late Latin domnus, from Latin dominus (see domain). The fem. form is Dona (Spanish/Portuguese), Donna (Italian).

v.

early 14c. contraction of do on (see doff). “After 1650 retained in popular use only in north. dialect; as a literary archaism it has become very frequent in 19th c.” [OED]. Related: Donned; donning.

n.

c.1300, earlier in surname Chyrimuth (1266, literally “Cherry-mouth”); from Anglo-French cherise, from Old North French cherise (Old French, Modern French cerise, 12c.), from Vulgar Latin *ceresia, from late Greek kerasian “cherry,” from Greek kerasos “cherry tree,” possibly from a language of Asia Minor. Mistaken in Middle English for a plural and stripped of its -s (cf. pea).

Old English had ciris “cherry” from a West Germanic borrowing of the Vulgar Latin word (cf. German Kirsch), but it died out after the Norman invasion and was replaced by the French word. Meaning “maidenhead, virginity” is from 1889, U.S. slang, from supposed resemblance to the hymen, but perhaps also from the long-time use of cherries as a symbol of the fleeting quality of life’s pleasures.

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