ringer
See also: Ringer
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɹɪŋə(ɹ)/
Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -ɪŋə(ɹ)
Etymology 1
From Middle English ringere, rynger, ryngar, equivalent to ring (“to sound a bell”) + -er.
Noun
ringer (plural ringers)
- Someone who rings, especially a bell ringer.
- 1863, Jean Ingelow, High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire:
- Pull, if ye never pull′d before;
Good ringers, pull your best," quoth he.
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- (mining) A crowbar[1].
References
- 1858, Peter Lund Simmonds, The Dictionary of Trade Products
Noun
ringer (plural ringers)
- (games) In the game of horseshoes, the event of the horseshoe landing around the pole.
- (uncountable, games) A game of marbles where players attempt to knock each other's marbles out of a ring drawn on the ground.
- A ringer T-shirt.
- 2007, Descant, number 138, page 28:
- […] shabby baseball caps, faded and worn-out T-shirts, ringers and polos with artificially aged hems […]
- 2011, Buck Peden, Baseball, Golf, Wars, Women & Puppies: An Autobiography, page 278:
- The shirts were light blue heather ringers with royal blue trim on the necks and sleeves.
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See also
Etymology 3
Probably from ring the changes.
Noun
ringer (plural ringers)
- (sports) A person highly proficient at a skill or sport who is brought in, often fraudulently, to supplement a team.
- Synonym: hustler
- (horse racing) A horse fraudulently entered in a race using the name of another horse.
- A person, animal, or entity which resembles another so closely as to be taken for the other, now usually in the phrase dead ringer.
- Synonym: dead ringer
- (UK, slang) A fraudulently cloned motor vehicle.
- 2020, Tom Hartley, Tom Hartley: The Dealmaker:
- I had heard early on in my career about 'ringers': cars that were stolen and cloned, but it was 1993 before I was to experience this first-hand.
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Etymology 4
Unknown. Probably so named after the custom of ringing a bell to denote the winner of a contest or competition.
Noun
ringer (plural ringers)
- (UK, dialect) A top performer.
- (Australia) The champion shearer of a shearing shed.
- 1891 December 5, The Bacchus Marsh Express, page 7, column 7:
- Click goes his shears; click, click, click.
Wide are the blows, and his hand is moving quick,
The ringer looks round, for he lost it by a blow,
And he curses that old shearer with the bare belled ewe.
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- (Australia) A stockman, a cowboy.
- 1964, Alec Bolton, Walkabout′s Australia, Walkabout magazine, page 107,
- The ringers are the stockmen on a station. The cattle pass through their hands before the drovers lift them and take them along the stock routes that lead to the killing pens in cities.
- 1987, Geoffrey Atkinson; Philip Quirk., The Australian Adventure: The Explorer′s Guide to the Island Continent, page 175:
- This vast holding is run by six ringers and six boys. A ringer is a qualified stationhand and a boy is a trainee. It takes four years for a boy to become a ringer.
- 2005, Jake Drake, The Wild West in Australia and America, page 156:
- Most people associated with the Australian beef industry believe the ringer′s skill of throwing cattle by the tail to be a practice that is purely Australian. There is ample evidence however, that it was practised in South and Central America long before it was developed here.
- 1964, Alec Bolton, Walkabout′s Australia, Walkabout magazine, page 107,
Etymology 5
Perhaps dissimilated from Middle English wringere (“stingy person, pennypincher, one who financially oppresses, an extortioner”).
Noun
ringer (plural ringers)
- (slang) Any person or thing that is fraudulent; a fake or impostor.
- (slang) A look-alike.
- That man over there is an exact ringer for my father!
Noun
ringer (plural ringers)
- (UK, military, informal, in combination) An officer having the specified number of rings (denoting rank) on the uniform sleeve.
- 2012, John Harris, The Lonely Voyage:
- A group of naval one- and two-ringers were chatting by the office door with a few ratings, complete with kit-bags and oilskins.
- 2013, Dudley Pope, Convoy:
- The senior officer of the escort was an RN two and a half ringer who had a reputation of being one of the best.
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Danish
Norwegian Nynorsk
Old Swedish
Etymology
From Old Norse hringr, from Proto-Germanic *hringaz.
Declension
Declension of ringer (strong a-stem)
Descendants
- Swedish: ring
Swedish
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