| 1. | a medieval glove, as of mail or plate, worn by a knight in armor to protect the hand. |
| 2. | a glove with an extended cuff for the wrist. |
| 3. | the cuff itself. |
| 4. | take up the gauntlet,
|
| 5. | throw down the gauntlet,
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| 1. | a former punishment, chiefly military, in which the offender was made to run between two rows of men who struck at him with switches or weapons as he passed. |
| 2. | the two rows of men administering this punishment. |
| 3. | an attack from two or all sides. |
| 4. | trying conditions; an ordeal. |
| 5. | gantlet 1 (def. 1). |
| 6. | gantlet 1 (def. 3). |
| 7. | run the gauntlet, to suffer severe criticism or tribulation. |
| 1. | Railroads. a track construction used in narrow places, in which two parallel tracks converge so that their inner rails cross, run parallel, and diverge again, thus allowing a train to remain on its own track at all times. |
| 2. | gauntlet 2 (defs. 1, 2, 4). |
| 3. | Railroads. to form or lay down as a gantlet: to gantlet tracks. |