Gransnet forums

Games

Multiple Meanings for One Word

(30 Posts)
Tuaim Sun 04-Aug-24 07:33:56

How many meanings can you find for one word in English?

Example:
leaves - individual sheets of paper of a book
she leaves - verb in 3rd person sing
leaves - plural of leaf from a tree

Marmin Sun 04-Aug-24 07:42:57

I believe the word set has hundreds of uses listed in the OED.

RosiesMaw2 Sun 04-Aug-24 09:30:21

Not to mention periods of absence from work (holidays) or military service.

Chestnut Sun 04-Aug-24 09:43:14

My favourite is bow because of the different pronunciations for the same word!

Bow - ribbon in your hair
Bow - bend forwards
Bow - front of a ship
Bow - for shooting arrows
Bow - for a violin
then we also have....
Bough - branch of a tree

Bellanonna Sun 04-Aug-24 10:02:05

Kind - pleasantly disposed
Kind - type or variety of

Bellanonna Sun 04-Aug-24 10:05:04

Change - loose coins
- alter

GoldenLady Thu 08-Aug-24 15:26:38

Buy -to purchase (verb)
Buy - a purchase (noun)
Buy - believe something
By - near
By - attributed to
Bi - two sexual preferences or racial identities
Bye - farewell

Indigo8 Thu 08-Aug-24 16:48:40

Polish - from Poland
Polish - noun, greasy stuff you put on furnitures, shoes etc.
Polish - verb to put sheen on teeth, shoes, furniture etc.
Polish - sophistication or a veneer of it.
Secretary - clerical assistant, typist.
Secretary - something that secretes eg gland.
Invalid - ill or physically challenged.
Invalid - not useable or valid
Tears - aqueous secretion from eyes
Tears - rips
Tears - rushes as in rushes along
Rush - a plant
Rush - go too fast
I know the first three have two different pronunciations but they are nevertheless spelled the same. There are many more.

HowVeryDareYou2 Thu 08-Aug-24 21:43:14

Dear - a term of endearment
Dear - expensive

Oregano Thu 08-Aug-24 21:56:59

Pressing - something urgent
Pressing - ironing
Pressing - squeezing

Mollygo Thu 08-Aug-24 21:59:41

Dish-bowl
Dish-part of a meal
Dish-give out

RosiesMaw2 Thu 08-Aug-24 22:04:13

A good looking fellow

JackyB Fri 09-Aug-24 08:51:30

Wasn't there a game where you have the two meanings and the other person had to guess the word? I can't remember the English name for it - it will come to me - but the German name was Teekessel (tea pot, or tea kettle)

JackyB Fri 09-Aug-24 08:55:28

The German Wiki page describing the game says that the first mention of it was in an English book published in 1896 and there it was called "Teapot". Unfortunately there isn't an English translation.

de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teekesselchen

SkippyO Fri 09-Aug-24 09:09:14

count - to determine the total number
(plus several subtle variations around taking into account, having an effect etc.)

count - a separate charge in law

count - a foreign nobleman

Bellanonna Fri 09-Aug-24 09:49:21

Figure - number
Figure - body shape
Figure (US) - to presume

Bellanonna Fri 09-Aug-24 09:51:04

JackyB, that sounds interesting, but I haven’t heard of it. I like the name!

SkippyO Fri 09-Aug-24 11:07:27

Google Translate's English version of the 'Teekessel' article referenced by JackyB. The examples used make more sense, knowing the original German words they've selected.
---------------------------------------------------------

Article:
Teapot, also called tea kettle, is a game in which a word with multiple meanings, i.e. a homonym or a polyseme, must be guessed based on the definition of the meanings.

Origin:
The currently known earliest mention and description of this game can be found in The Book of a Hundred Games by Mary White (1896), p. 117, under the English name Teapot.
Rules

Normally only nouns are used, but often no proper names or foreign language terms. Accordingly, Henkel (for the washing powder manufacturer and as part of the cup) or surfen (on the Internet and on the surfboard) would not be allowed.

Usually several of the players secretly agree on such a term, with each taking on one of the meanings. Then individual statements are made one after the other about the respective meanings, whereby the term to be guessed is always replaced by the word tea kettle. The other players have to guess the term from the statements.

Examples:

"My tea kettle can light up." - "You can eat my tea kettle." Solution: The pear (die Birne) as a lamp (bulb) and as fruit (die Birne).

"You can sit on my tea kettle." - "You can change money on my tea kettle." Solution: The bank (die Bank) as furniture (bench) and also as a credit institution (die Bank).

Two teams often compete against each other, with the one that needs the fewest clues overall winning. A common variant is that the term is chosen by the team to which the guessers do not belong, and then as many players on the guessing team are told the term as it has meanings - these "insiders" then have to describe the term so cleverly that their own team can guess it with as few clues as possible.
Scoring

If two teams play against each other, the fewer explanations a team needs to guess, the more points they get. The type of explanation can be specified, such as describing the color first, then the shape, etc. If no teams are formed, everyone except the game leader can guess, and whoever guesses the word first gets a point and takes over the game leader for the next round.

Indigo8 Fri 09-Aug-24 14:24:16

JackyB

The German Wiki page describing the game says that the first mention of it was in an English book published in 1896 and there it was called "Teapot". Unfortunately there isn't an English translation.

de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teekesselchen

When I was a child, we used to play a game that sounds very similar called 'Coffee Pot'.

Does anyone remember this ?

Ali08 Mon 12-Aug-24 01:07:19

Aye - for yes.
Eye - 2 on your face.
Ai-ai - an animal. (Yeah, I probably didn't spell it right).
I - that's me!

Ali08 Mon 12-Aug-24 01:08:07

Ate - my meal,
Eight - it cost me 8 squid.

nanna8 Mon 12-Aug-24 01:51:19

Sick- vomit
Sick- not well
Sick- fantastic ( for the young ones !)
Sick- mental illness
Sic- as it stands

Guesswhat Mon 12-Aug-24 02:01:27

Pound - currency

Pound - weight

Pound - holding place for dogs etc.

Pound (vb) - hit repeatedly

Chestnut Mon 12-Aug-24 12:44:02

nanna8

Sick- vomit
Sick- not well
Sick- fantastic ( for the young ones !)
Sick- mental illness
Sic- as it stands

That is the one that really winds me up. It has literally switched meaning from something horrible to something wonderful! Whoever started that one?

GoldenLady Mon 12-Aug-24 15:16:40

Chestnut, you inspired me:

A popular nut for roasting
An auburn hair color
A wood used for furniture
An old, corny joke