HomeServicesBlogDictionariesContactSpanish Course
← Back to search

Meaning of footspur | Babel Free

Noun CEFR B2

Definitions

  1. A foothill that shoots from a mountain or range in a perpendicular direction.
  2. A crosspiece on a boat against which the rower braces his or her feet; stretcher.
  3. A spur or spike projecting from the foot, such as that worn to prod a horse, or that occurring naturally on some birds, such as roosters.

Examples

“A footspur of Tantalus Hill seeks ineffectually to bar the entrance to Manoa's grateful shades and inviting solitudes.”
“A footspur of Bigelow Mountain rises to 2,000 feet in the northwest corner.”
“At its eastern end another gate leads into the citadel, Al Qasr, which is raised above the city on a footspur of Jebel Nuqūm.”
“My sickness was gone like a flash; I seized the oar, made a footspur of Don Sly's back, and, all pulling steadily, we held our our own till the squall spent itself and then we shot out of the ground swell, and headed across the bay.”
“Betwean each beam of the boat is also fastened a piece of timber called a stretcher or footspur, against which they place their feet when rowing, to enable them to have a more complete command of their oar.”
“Charles then grabbed a floating footspur, and threatened him with a beating if he did not pull at once for the shore.”
“At one stage Clarke of Moville, used a footspur from his boat to attack Philip Magee of the Portrush boat.”
“Slag here lifted the footspur to dash its brains out, as he had been enjoined; but the type of harmlessness, being now rested, escaped its new, and, shall we say, more irrational enemy, by flight.”
“But they recked nothing thereof, went into the monastery, climbed up to the holy rood, and then took the crown from our Lord's head, all of beaten gold; then they took the footspur that was underneath His foot, which was all of red gold.”
“To these spurs she owes her name, Korydalis, by which word the Greeks refer to the family of crested larks her own turquoise flowers supposedly mimicking the footspurs of these dull brown aviators.”
“It befriended a blind priest, and for a time was happy, until it accidentally poisoned him with its weird, venomous footspur.”

CEFR level

B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.

See also

Learn this word in context

See footspur used in real conversations inside our free language course.

Start Free Course