Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    arms
    /ɑːmz/

    plural

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. ARMS definition: 1. weapons and equipment used to kill and injure people: 2. to prepare to fight or to start…. Learn more.

  3. noun. uk / ɑːm / us / ɑːrm / arm noun (BODY PART) Add to word list. A1 [ C ] either of the two long parts of the upper body that are attached to the shoulders and have the hands at the end: hold someone in your arms He held her in his arms (= held her closely). throw your arms around She threw her arms around me and gave me a hug.

  4. Arms as in “weapons,” comes from the Latin arma, “tools of war,” which passed into English from French in the 1200s. In the Middle Ages, arms referred to various weapons (e.g., bows and arrows, catapults) and equipment of war, including defensive shields and armor.

  5. The meaning of ARM is a human upper limb; especially : the part between the shoulder and the wrist. How to use arm in a sentence.

  6. (formal) weapons, especially as used by the army, navy, etc. arms and ammunition. The UN imposed an arms embargo on the country. He's the world's most notorious arms dealer. Police officers in the UK do not usually carry arms. They banned arms sales to countries with poor human rights records.

  7. Definition of arm noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. Arm definition: the upper limb of the human body, especially the part extending from the shoulder to the wrist.. See examples of ARM used in a sentence.

  9. 1. A weapon, especially a firearm: troops bearing arms; ICBMs, bombs, and other nuclear arms. 2. A branch of a military force: infantry, armor, and other combat arms.

  10. Your arms are the two long parts of your body that are attached to your shoulders and that have your hands at the end.

  11. Arms are weapons. If a rebel group starts acquiring arms, it becomes a clear threat to its opponents. If you hear references on the news to "the arms race" or " arms exports," you know the subject is guns, bombs, bullets, and other weapons and ammunition.