knight

See also: Knight

English

a knight (warrior)
a knight (chess)

Pronunciation

  • enPR: nīt, IPA(key): /naɪt/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -aɪt
  • Homophones: night, nite

Etymology 1

From Middle English knight, knyght, kniht, from Old English cniht, cneht, cneoht (boy, youth, servant, attendant, retainer, disciple, warrior, boyhood, junior member of a guild), from Proto-Germanic *knehtaz (compare Dutch knecht (attendant, servant), German Knecht (lad, servant), Danish knægt (boy, lad, knave)), originally ‘billet (wood), block of wood’ (compare Dutch laarzeknecht (boot-jack), dialectal German Knüchtel (bat, club)), from Proto-Indo-European *gnegʰ-, from *gen- ‘to ball up, pinch, compress’.

Alternative forms

Noun

knight (plural knights)

  1. A warrior, especially of the Middle Ages.
    King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table
  2. A young servant or follower; a military attendant.
  3. Nowadays, a person on whom a knighthood has been conferred by a monarch.
  4. (chess) A chess piece, often in the shape of a horse's head, that is moved two squares in one direction and one at right angles to that direction in a single move, leaping over any intervening pieces.
  5. (card games, dated) A playing card bearing the figure of a knight; the knave or jack.
  6. (entomology) Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the genus Ypthima.
Synonyms
  • (chess piece): horse (informal)
Derived terms
Translations
See also
Chess pieces in English · chess pieces, chessmen (see also: chess) (layout · text)
king queen castle, rook bishop knight pawn
  • Appendix:Chess_pieces

Etymology 2

From Middle English knighten, kniȝten, from the noun. Cognate with Middle High German knehten.

Verb

knight (third-person singular simple present knights, present participle knighting, simple past and past participle knighted)

  1. (transitive) To confer knighthood upon.
    The king knighted the young squire.
  2. (chess, transitive) To promote (a pawn) to a knight.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations

See also


Middle English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old English cniht, from Proto-Germanic *knehtaz.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /knixt/, [kniçt]
  • Rhymes: -ixt

Noun

knight (plural knights)

  1. knight

Descendants

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