noun, plural ax⋅es [ak-siz]
, verb, axed, ax⋅ing.| 1. | an instrument with a bladed head on a handle or helve, used for hewing, cleaving, chopping, etc. |
| 2. | Jazz Slang. any musical instrument. |
| 3. | the ax, Informal.
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| 4. | to shape or trim with an ax. |
| 5. | to chop, split, destroy, break open, etc., with an ax: The firemen had to ax the door to reach the fire. |
| 6. | Informal. to dismiss, restrict, or destroy brutally, as if with an ax: The main office axed those in the field who didn't meet their quota. Congress axed the budget. Also, axe. |
| 7. | have an ax to grind, to have a personal or selfish motive: His interest may be sincere, but I suspect he has an ax to grind. |
nē; < IE *ag-s-
| var. of axi-, esp. before a vowel. |
ax 2 (āks) v. ax·ed, ax·ing, ax·es Nonstandard Variant of ask. Our Living Language : Ax, a common nonstandard variant of ask, is often identified as an especially salient feature of African American Vernacular English. While it is true that the form is frequent in the speech of African Americans, it used to be common in the speech of white Americans as well, especially in the South and in the middle sections of the U.S. It was once common among New Englanders, but has largely died out there as a local feature. The widespread use of this pronunciation should not be surprising since ax is a very old word in English, having been used in England for over 1,000 years. In Old English we find both āscian and ācsian, and in Middle English both asken and axen. Moreover, the forms with cs or x had no stigma associated with them. Chaucer used asken and axen interchangeably, as in the lines "I wol aske, if it hir will be/To be my wyf" and "Men axed hym, what sholde bifalle," both from The Canterbury Tales. The forms in x arose from the forms in sk by a linguistic process called metathesis, in which two sounds are reversed. The x thus represents (ks), the flipped version of (sk). Metathesis is a common linguistic process around the world and does not arise from a defect in speaking. Nevertheless, ax has become stigmatized as substandard—a fate that has befallen other words, like ain't, that were once perfectly acceptable in literate circles. |
ax abbr.
axis
axi- pref.
Variant of axio-.
| AX ask (shortwave transmission) |