Homing
[hoh-ming] /ˈhoʊ mɪŋ/
adjective
1.
capable of returning , usually over a great distance:
We saw the homing birds at dusk.
2.
guiding or directing homeward or to a destination, especially by mechanical means:
the homing instinct; a homing beacon.
[hohm] /hoʊm/
noun
1.
a house, apartment, or other shelter that is the usual residence of a person, family, or household.
2.
the place in which one’s domestic affections are centered.
3.
an institution for the homeless, sick, etc.:
a nursing home.
4.
the dwelling place or retreat of an animal.
5.
the place or region where something is native or most common.
6.
any place of residence or refuge:
a heavenly home.
7.
a person’s native place or own country.
8.
(in games) the destination or goal.
9.
a principal base of operations or activities:
The new stadium will be the home of the local football team.
10.
Baseball. .
11.
Lacrosse. one of three attack positions nearest the opposing goal.
adjective
12.
of, relating to, or connected with one’s home or country; domestic:
home products.
13.
principal or main:
the corporation’s home office.
14.
reaching the mark aimed at:
a home thrust.
15.
Sports. played in a ball park, arena, or the like, that is or is assumed to be the center of operations of a team:
The pitcher didn’t lose a single home game all season.
Compare (def 11).
adverb
16.
to, toward, or at home:
to go home.
17.
deep; to the heart:
The truth of the accusation struck home.
18.
to the mark or point aimed at:
He drove the point home.
19.
Nautical.
verb (used without object), homed, homing.
20.
to go or return home.
21.
(of guided missiles, aircraft, etc.) to proceed, especially under control of an automatic aiming mechanism, toward a specified target, as a plane, missile, or location (often followed by in on):
The missile homed in on the target.
22.
to navigate toward a point by means of coordinates other than those given by altitudes.
23.
to have a home where specified; reside.
verb (used with object), homed, homing.
24.
to bring or send home.
25.
to provide with a home.
26.
to direct, especially under control of an automatic aiming device, toward an airport, target, etc.
Idioms
27.
at home,
28.
bring home to, to make evident to; clarify or emphasize for:
The irrevocability of her decision was brought home to her.
29.
home and dry, British Informal. having safely achieved one’s goal.
30.
home free,
31.
write home about, to comment especially on; remark on:
The town was nothing to write home about. His cooking is really something to write home about.
/ˈhəʊmɪŋ/
noun (modifier)
1.
(zoology) relating to the ability to return home after travelling great distances: homing instinct
2.
(of an aircraft, a missile, etc) capable of guiding itself onto a target or to a specified point
/həʊm/
noun
1.
the place or a place where one lives: have you no home to go to?
2.
a house or other dwelling
3.
a family or other group living in a house or other place
4.
a person’s country, city, etc, esp viewed as a birthplace, a residence during one’s early years, or a place dear to one
5.
the environment or habitat of a person or animal
6.
the place where something is invented, founded, or developed: the US is the home of baseball
7.
8.
(sport) one’s own ground: the match is at home
9.
10.
(lacrosse)
11.
(baseball) another name for home plate
12.
(NZ, informal, obsolete) Britain, esp England
13.
a home from home, a place other than one’s own home where one can be at ease
14.
at home
15.
at home in, at home on, at home with, familiar or conversant with
16.
(Brit, informal) home and dry, definitely safe or successful: we will not be home and dry until the votes have been counted Austral. and NZ equivalent home and hosed
17.
near home, concerning one deeply
adjective (usually prenominal)
18.
of, relating to, or involving one’s home, country, etc; domestic
19.
(of an activity) done in one’s house: home taping
20.
effective or deadly: a home thrust
21.
(sport) relating to one’s own ground: a home game
22.
(US) central; principal: the company’s home office
adverb
23.
to or at home: I’ll be home tomorrow
24.
to or on the point
25.
to the fullest extent: hammer the nail home
26.
(of nautical gear) into or in the best or proper position: the boom is home
27.
bring home to
28.
(nautical) come home, (of an anchor) to fail to hold
29.
come home to, to become absolutely clear to
30.
(informal) nothing to write home about, to be of no particular interest: the film was nothing to write home about
verb
31.
(intransitive) (of birds and other animals) to return home accurately from a distance
32.
often foll by on or onto. to direct or be directed onto a point or target, esp by automatic navigational aids
33.
to send or go home
34.
to furnish with or have a home
35.
(intransitive; often foll by in or in on) to be directed towards a goal, target, etc
/hjuːm/
noun
1.
Baron, See Home of the Hirsel
n.
“action of going home,” 1765, in reference to pigeons, from present participle of home (v.). Homing pigeon attested by 1868.
n.
Old English ham “dwelling, house, estate, village,” from Proto-Germanic *haimaz (cf. Old Frisian hem “home, village,” Old Norse heimr “residence, world,” heima “home,” Danish hjem, Middle Dutch heem, German heim “home,” Gothic haims “village”), from PIE root *tkei- “to settle, dwell, be home” (cf. Sanskrit kseti “abides, dwells,” Armenian shen “inhabited,” Greek kome, Lithuanian kaimas “village;” Old Church Slavonic semija “domestic servants”).
‘Home’ in the full range and feeling of [Modern English] home is a conception that belongs distinctively to the word home and some of its Gmc. cognates and is not covered by any single word in most of the IE languages. [Buck]
Home stretch (1841) is originally a reference from horse racing. Home base in baseball attested by 1859 (home plate by 1867; home as the goal in a sport or game is from 1778). Home economics first attested 1899. Slang phrase make (oneself) at home “become comfortable in a place one does not live” dates from 1892. To keep the home fires burning is from a song title from 1914. To be nothing to write home about “unremarkable” is from 1907. Home movie is from 1919; home computer is from 1967.
v.
1765, “to go home,” from home (n.). Meaning “be guided to a destination by radio signals, etc. (of missiles, aircraft, etc.) is from 1920; it had been used earlier in reference to pigeons (1862). Related: Homed; homing. Old English had hamian “to establish in a home.”
Related Terms
bring home the bacon, home boy, money from home, nobody home, nothing to write home about
Read Also:
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noun 1. a mechanism incorporated into a guided missile, airplane, etc., that aims it toward its objective.
- Homing guidance
noun 1. a method of missile guidance in which internal equipment enables it to steer itself onto the target, as by sensing the target’s heat radiation
- Hominid
[hom-uh-nid] /ˈhɒm ə nɪd/ noun, Anthropology. 1. any of the modern or extinct bipedal primates of the family Hominidae, including all species of the genera Homo and Australopithecus. /ˈhɒmɪnɪd/ noun 1. any primate of the family Hominidae, which includes modern man (Homo sapiens) and the extinct precursors of man adjective 2. of, relating to, or […]
- Homing-pigeon
noun 1. any pigeon used to carry messages and equipped by training and breeding to fly home, sometimes from great distances. noun 1. any breed of pigeon developed for its homing instinct, used for carrying messages or for racing Also called homer
- Hominids
[hom-uh-nid] /ˈhɒm ə nɪd/ noun, Anthropology. 1. any of the modern or extinct bipedal primates of the family Hominidae, including all species of the genera Homo and Australopithecus. /ˈhɒmɪnɪd/ noun 1. any primate of the family Hominidae, which includes modern man (Homo sapiens) and the extinct precursors of man adjective 2. of, relating to, or […]