handicap
verb/ˈhændikæp/
/ˈhændikæp/
[usually passive]Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they handicap | /ˈhændikæp/ /ˈhændikæp/ |
| he / she / it handicaps | /ˈhændikæps/ /ˈhændikæps/ |
| past simple handicapped | /ˈhændikæpt/ /ˈhændikæpt/ |
| past participle handicapped | /ˈhændikæpt/ /ˈhændikæpt/ |
| -ing form handicapping | /ˈhændikæpɪŋ/ /ˈhændikæpɪŋ/ |
- to make something more difficult for somebody to do
- be handicapped (by something) Smaller parties are seriously handicapped by the electoral system.
- The team was handicapped by the loss of their key striker early in the game.
Word Originmid 17th cent.: from the phrase hand in cap; originally a pastime in which one person claimed an article belonging to another and offered something in exchange, any difference in value being decided by an umpire. All three deposited forfeit money in a cap; the two opponents showed their agreement or disagreement with the valuation by bringing out their hands either full or empty. If both were the same, the umpire took the forfeit money; if not it went to the person who accepted the valuation. The term handicap race was applied (late 18th cent.) to a horse race in which an umpire decided the weight to be carried by each horse, the owners showing acceptance or dissent in a similar way: hence in the late 19th cent. handicap came to mean the extra weight given to the superior horse.
Check pronunciation:
handicap