To operate upon by means of a horn-press or horning-press. See horn, n., 4 .
To furnish with horns.
To cause to wear “horns” as the mark of a cuckold; cuckold.
To give the shape of a horn to.
To treat to a charivari, or mock serenade of tin horns, etc. See horning, 2.
To adjust (the frames of a ship) in process of construction so that they shall be exactly at right angles with the line of the keel.
noun.
In sheet-metal work, an attachment to a press which, in its most simple form, resembles the horn of an anvil. In seaming and pressing locked sheets of tin together it serves as the anvil on which the joined sheets are laid while the press bends the seams down. It gives name to the work of horning, or seaming with a horn, and to the horning-press, a press on which horning is done.
noun.
In organ-building, a reed-stop with a tone like that of the French horn.
noun.
In golf, same as bone, 10.
noun.
The bare branch of a leafless tree. [Figurative.]
noun.
One of the branches of the V-shaped comb found in such breeds of poultry as the Polish and La Flèeche.
noun.
In archery: The tip at each end of a bow, usually made of horn and provided with a nock for fastening the bowstring.
noun.
A reinforcement at the butt of an arrow, fitted with a nock to receive the bowstring: usually made of horn.
noun.
The portion of a composite bow which is made of horn: see bow, 2.
noun.
In machinery, a curved lever, pivoted on the side of a planing-machine, which, on being knocked over by the tappets on the moving table, gives, through a linkage, the reversing movement to the driving mechanism.
noun.
An excrescent growth upon the head in certain animals, serving as a weapon of offense or defense. See def. 3.
noun.
An antler of a deer.
noun.
Hardened and thickened epidermis or cuticle, as that of which nails, claws, and hoofs consist, differing from hair or other cuticular structures chiefly in density and massiveness.
noun.
Something made of horn, or like or likened to a horn in position, shape, use, or purpose.
noun.
Specifically— A feeler; a tentacle; an antenna; an ovipositor; also, the tuft of feathers upon the head of sundry birds, resembling a horn; a plumicorn, as that of various owls.
noun.
A wind-instrument more or less resembling a horn in shape and size, and originally made of horn: as, a hunting-horn; a tin horn. In the simpler forms the horn is used chiefly to give signals, producing single or slightly variable loud tones. The hunting-horn, however, was early elaborated and made capable of producing a variety of calls, fanfares, and simple tnnes. Wood, ivory, and various metals have been used for making horns.