hobby









hobby


hobby 1[hob-ee] ExamplesWord Origin See more synonyms for hobby on Thesaurus.com noun, plural hob·bies.

  1. an activity or interest pursued for pleasure or relaxation and not as a main occupation: Her hobbies include stamp-collecting and woodcarving.
  2. a child’s hobbyhorse.
  3. Archaic. a small horse.

Idioms

  1. ride a hobby, to concern oneself excessively with a favorite notion or activity.Also ride a hobbyhorse.

Origin of hobby 1 1325–75; Middle English hoby(n), probably for Robin, or Robert (cf. hob2), used as horse’s name, as in dobbin Related formshob·by·ist, nounhob·by·less, adjective hobby 2[hob-ee] noun, plural hob·bies.

  1. a small Old World falcon, Falco subbuteo, formerly flown at such small game as larks.

Origin of hobby 2 1400–50; late Middle English hoby Middle French hobé, suffixal variant of Middle French, Old French hobel (compare French hobereau), probably noun derivative of hobeler to skirmish, harass, perhaps Middle Dutch hob(b)elen to turn, roll; compare Dutch hobbelen to rock, jolt (cf. hobble) Related Words for hobbies art, specialty, avocation, diversion, craft, amusement, fun, sport, obsession, fad, occupation, play, sideline, shot, vagary, thing, weakness, whimsy, fancy, bag Examples from the Web for hobbies Contemporary Examples of hobbies

  • Did you two engage in any hobbies or games together in your downtime?

    ‘Game of Thrones’ Star Maisie Williams on Arya Stark’s S4 Journey and Her Crush on Andrew Garfield

    Marlow Stern

    June 23, 2014

  • But my parents also left me with a dearth of hobbies that make admissions committees salivate.

    The Absurd Lies of College Admissions

    Megan McArdle

    April 1, 2013

  • The bottom line: we have our jobs, we work on those; we have our hobbies, we work on those; we have our bodies, we work on those.

    The Secrets of Happy Families: Bruce Feiler’s Tips for Parenting

    Bruce Feiler

    March 3, 2013

  • My father had no hobbies and spent what little free time he had helping my Mom take care of us.

    Why I Choose to Be Child-Free: Readers Share Their Stories

    Harry Siegel

    February 27, 2013

  • In an online bio, she describes her hobbies as running, skiing, and surfing.

    Paula Broadwell, David Petraeus’s Biographer, Is Allegedly His Mistress

    Isabel Wilkinson

    November 10, 2012

  • Historical Examples of hobbies

  • Whately was a man of hobbies, and horticulture was one of these.

    Charles Lever, His Life in His Letters, Vol. I (of II)

    Edmund Downey

  • But the true man of that type had found all hobbies fail him.

    Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens

    G. K. Chesterton

  • But the world, Auberon, the real world, is not run on these hobbies.

    The Napoleon of Notting Hill

    Gilbert K. Chesterton

  • He chooses his hobbies and “rides” them entirely on his own initiative.

    The Measurement of Intelligence

    Lewis Madison Terman

  • Cochran knew the Major intimately, his hobbies and aversions.

    Terry

    Charles Goff Thomson

  • British Dictionary definitions for hobbies hobby 1 noun plural -bies

    1. an activity pursued in spare time for pleasure or relaxation
    2. archaic, or dialect a small horse or pony
    3. short for hobbyhorse (def. 1)
    4. an early form of bicycle, without pedals

    Derived Formshobbyist, nounWord Origin for hobby C14 hobyn, probably variant of proper name Robin; compare dobbin hobby 2 noun plural -bies

    1. any of several small Old World falcons, esp the European Falco subbuteo, formerly used in falconry

    Word Origin for hobby C15: from Old French hobet, from hobe falcon; probably related to Middle Dutch hobbelen to roll, turn Word Origin and History for hobbies hobby n.

    late 13c., hobyn, “small horse, pony,” later “mock horse used in the morris dance,” and c.1550 “child’s toy riding horse,” which led to hobby-horse in a transferred sense of “favorite pastime or avocation,” first recorded 1670s, shortened to hobby by 1816. The connecting notion being “activity that doesn’t go anywhere.” Probably originally a proper name for a horse (cf. dobbin), a diminutive of Robert or Robin. The original hobbyhorse was a “Tourney Horse,” a wooden or basketwork frame worn around the waist and held on with shoulder straps, with a fake tail and horse head attached, so the wearer appears to be riding a horse. These were part of church and civic celebrations at Midsummer and New Year’s throughout England.

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