| an extraordinary or unusual thing, person, or event; an exceptional example or instance. |
| a gadget; dingus; thingumbob. |
pocket (ˈpɒkɪt) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a small bag or pouch in a garment for carrying small articles, money, etc |
| 2. | any bag or pouch or anything resembling this |
| 3. | a. a cavity or hollow in the earth, etc, such as one containing gold or other ore |
| b. the ore in such a place | |
| 4. | a small enclosed or isolated area: a pocket of resistance |
| 5. | billiards, snooker any of the six holes with pouches or nets let into the corners and sides of a billiard table |
| 6. | a position in a race in which a competitor is hemmed in |
| 7. | Australian rules football a player in one of two side positions at the ends of the ground: back pocket; forward pocket |
| 8. | (South African) a bag or sack of vegetables or fruit |
| 9. | in one's pocket under one's control |
| 10. | in pocket having made a profit, as after a transaction |
| 11. | rugby in the pocket (of a fly half) in an attacking position slightly further back from play than normal, making himself available for a drop goal attempt |
| 12. | out of pocket having made a loss, as after a transaction |
| 13. | line one's pockets to make money, esp by dishonesty when in a position of trust |
| 14. | (modifier) suitable for fitting in a pocket; small: a pocket edition |
| 15. | slang (modifier) poker denoting a pair formed from the two private cards dealt to a player in a game of Texas hold 'em: pocket queens |
| —vb , -ets, -eting, -eted | |
| 16. | to put into one's pocket |
| 17. | to take surreptitiously or unlawfully; steal |
| 18. | (usually passive) to enclose or confine in or as if in a pocket |
| 19. | to receive (an insult, injury, etc) without retaliating |
| 20. | to conceal or keep back (feelings): he pocketed his pride and accepted help |
| 21. | billiards, snooker to drive (a ball) into a pocket |
| 22. | (US) See also pocket veto (esp of the President) to retain (a bill) without acting on it in order to prevent it from becoming law |
| 23. | to hem in (an opponent), as in racing |
| [C15: from Anglo-Norman poket a little bag, from poque bag, from Middle Dutch poke | |
| 'pocketable | |
| —adj | |
| 'pocketless | |
| —adj | |
pocket pock·et (pŏk'ĭt)
n.
In anatomy, a cul-de-sac or pouchlike cavity.
A diseased space between the inflamed gum and the surface of a tooth.
A collection of pus in a nearly closed sac.
To enclose within a confined space.
To approach the surface at a localized spot, as with the thinned out wall of an abscess which is about to rupture.