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Stymie - 5 dictionary results

sty⋅mie

[stahy-mee] noun, verb, -mied, -mie⋅ing.
–noun
1. Golf. (on a putting green) an instance of a ball's lying on a direct line between the cup and the ball of an opponent about to putt.
2. a situation or problem presenting such difficulties as to discourage or defeat any attempt to deal with or resolve it.
–verb (used with object)
3. to hinder, block, or thwart.
Also, stymy, stimy.


Origin:
1855–60; orig. uncert.


3. stump, mystify, frustrate, confound.
sty·mie also sty·my   (stī'mē)   
tr.v.   sty·mied (-mēd), sty·mie·ing also sty·my·ing (-mē-ĭng), sty·mies (-mēz)
To thwart; stump: a problem in thermodynamics that stymied half the class.
n.  
  1. An obstacle or obstruction.
  2. Sports A situation in golf in which an opponent's ball obstructs the line of play of one's own ball on the putting green.

[Origin unknown.]

Stymie

Sty"mie\, n. Also Stimy \Sti"my\ . [Orig. uncertain.] (Golf) The position of two balls on the putting green such that, being more than six inches apart, one ball lies directly between the other and the hole at which the latter must be played; also, the act of bringing the balls into this position.

Stymie

Sty"mie\, v. t. Also Stimy \Sti"my\ . (Golf) To bring into the position of, or impede by, a stymie.

stymie 
1834, (n.), "condition in which an opponent's golf ball blocks the hole," perhaps from Scottish stymie "person who sees poorly," from stime "the least bit" (c.1300), of uncertain origin (Icelandic cognate skima is attested from c.1685). The verb, in golf, is from 1857; general sense of "block, hinder, thwart" is from 1902.
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