Hypertext Webster Gateway: "rapping"

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) (web1913)

Rap \Rap\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Rapped}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Rapping}.] [Akin to Sw. rappa to strike, rapp stroke, Dan.
rap, perhaps of imitative origin.]
To strike with a quick, sharp blow; to knock; as, to rap on
the door.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) (web1913)

Rap \Rap\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Rapped}, usually written {Rapt};
p. pr. & vb. n. {Rapping}.] [OE. rapen; akin to LG. & D.
rapen to snatch, G. raffen, Sw. rappa; cf. Dan. rappe sig to
make haste, and Icel. hrapa to fall, to rush, hurry. The word
has been confused with L. rapere to seize. Cf. {Rape}
robbery, {Rapture}, {Raff}, v., {Ramp}, v.]
1. To snatch away; to seize and hurry off.

And through the Greeks and Ilians they rapt The
whirring chariot. --Chapman.

From Oxford I was rapt by my nephew, Sir Edmund
Bacon, to Redgrove. --Sir H.
Wotton.

2. To hasten. [Obs.] --Piers Plowman.

3. To seize and bear away, as the mind or thoughts; to
transport out of one's self; to affect with ecstasy or
rapture; as, rapt into admiration.

I'm rapt with joy to see my Marcia's tears.
--Addison.

Rapt into future times, the bard begun. --Pope.

4. To exchange; to truck. [Obs. & Law]

{To rap and ren}, {To rap and rend}. [Perhaps fr. Icel. hrapa
to hurry and r[ae]na plunder, fr. r[=a]n plunder, E. ran.]
To seize and plunder; to snatch by violence. --Dryden.
``[Ye] waste all that ye may rape and renne.'' --Chaucer.

All they could rap and rend pilfer. --Hudibras.

{To rap out}, to utter with sudden violence, as an oath.

A judge who rapped out a great oath. --Addison.


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