hatchet

English

A wooden-handled hatchet.

Etymology

From Middle English hachet, a borrowing from Old French hachete, diminutive of hache (axe), from Frankish *hapja, *happija, from Proto-Germanic *hapjō, *habjō (knife), from Proto-Indo-European *kop- (to strike, to beat). Cognate with Old High German happa, heppa, habba (reaper, sickle), German Hippe (billhook).

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -ætʃɪt

Noun

hatchet (plural hatchets)

  1. A small light axe with a short handle; a tomahawk.
    • Longfellow
      Buried was the bloody hatchet.

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

hatchet (third-person singular simple present hatchets, present participle hatcheting or hatchetting, simple past and past participle hatcheted or hatchetted)

  1. (transitive) To cut with a hatchet.
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