ivy

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
9
Words With Friends
9
Letters
3
Pronunciation
/ˈaɪvi/

Definition of ivy

8 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)Any of several woody, climbing, or trailing evergreen plants of the genus Hedera.
    “Hidden timber elements, lintels and roof tiles have also been replaced, in addition to gaining a new paint job and guttering drainage, and the removal of ivy that was damaging the exterior.”
See all 8 definitions

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)Any of several woody, climbing, or trailing evergreen plants of the genus Hedera.
    “Hidden timber elements, lintels and roof tiles have also been replaced, in addition to gaining a new paint job and guttering drainage, and the removal of ivy that was damaging the exterior.”
  2. (broadly, countable, uncountable)Any similar plant of any genus.
  3. (informal)A university that is part of the Ivy League.

name

  1. A unisex given name from English.
    “Little Ivy's life, as the months pass on, is a quiet, uneventful one, but exceedingly happy withal: - - - "You have a strange name, my dear," the old lady says one day, and the child answers in her serious, old-fashioned way, "Yes, so everyone has always said. You know my mamma died when I was born, and papa named me that because he said that I came when his heart was all aching with sorrow, and twined around it and comforted him."”
    “Kind people apply all the milder words to your face; only Father ever called it ugly. Ugly Ivy mingy as her name. Father himself was handsome and drunken. Mother had wanted 'Ivy' simple and yet pretty and for once stuck to her guns. You wished she hadn't.”
  2. A unisex given name from English.
  3. (rare)A unisex given name from English.
    “Ivy Andrews, Ivy Calvin, Ivy Lee”
  4. (rare)A diminutive of the male given name Ivan.
    “Ivy Olson, Ivy Williamson”
  5. A surname from English.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English ivi, from Old English īfiġ, from Proto-West Germanic *ibig, *ibag, *ibah, from Proto-Germanic *ibahs (compare West Flemish iefte, Low German Eiloov, Ieloof, German Efeu), from Proto-Indo-European *(h₁)ebʰ- (compare Welsh efwr (“black elder”), Ancient Greek ἴφυον (íphuon, “spike-lavender, Lavandula Spica”)).

Hooks

2 extensions · 2 front

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