From Middle English tuft , toft , tofte , an alteration of earlier *tuffe (> Modern English tuff ), from Old French touffe , tuffe , toffe , tofe ( “ tuft ” ) (modern French touffe ), from Late Latin tufa ( “ helmet crest ” ) (near Vegezio). Compare Old English þūf ( “ tuft ” ) , Old Norse þúfa ( “ mound ” ) , Swedish tuva ( “ tussock; grassy hillock ” ) , Swedish tova ( “ tangled knot ” ) , Swedish tofs ( “ tuft, tassel ” ) , from Proto-Germanic *þūbǭ ( “ tube ” ) , *þūbaz ; akin to Latin tūber ( “ hump, swelling ” ) , Ancient Greek τῡ́φη ( tū́phē , “ cattail (used to stuff beds) ” ) .
tuft (plural tufts )
A bunch of feathers , grass or hair , etc., held together at the base .
A cluster of threads drawn tightly through upholstery , a mattress or a quilt , etc., to secure and strengthen the padding .
A small clump of trees or bushes .
1755 , Miguel de Cervantes, translated by Tobias Smollett , Don Quixote , Volume One, II.4:“Not far from this place, there is a tuft of about a dozen of tall beeches [ …] .”
( historical ) A gold tassel on the cap worn by titled undergraduates at English universities.
( historical ) A person entitled to wear such a tassel.
1848 November – 1850 December, William Makepeace Thackeray , chapter 62, in The History of Pendennis. [ … ] , volume (please specify |volume=I or II) , London: Bradbury and Evans , [ … ] , published 1849–1850 , →OCLC :A college tutor, or a nobleman’s toady, who appears one fine day as my right reverend lord, in a silk apron and a shovel-hat, and assumes benedictory airs over me, is still the same man we remember at Oxbridge, when he was truckling to the tufts , and bullying the poor undergraduates in the lecture-room.
bunch
Armenian: please add this translation if you can
Bulgarian: кичур (bg) m ( kičur )
Catalan: floc (ca) m
Chinese:
Mandarin: 綹 / 绺 (zh) ( liǔ )
Dutch: pluk (nl) m , bundel (nl) m
Esperanto: tufo (eo)
Finnish: töyhtö (fi) , tupsu (fi)
French: touffe (fr) f
Galician: guedello m , guecho m , caramiñola f , feixe (gl) m , gavela f , mostea f , topete m
German: Büschel (de) n , Tuff (de) m
Hungarian: fürt (hu) ( hair ) , csomó (hu) ( grass )
Ido: tufo (io)
Irish: dual m , dlaoi f , stoth m
Italian: cespo (it) m , ciuffo (it) m , ciocca (it) , zolla (it) f
Latin: torulus n
Macedonian: вр́зоп m ( vŕzop ) , пра́мен ( prámen ) , сноп m ( snop ) , ки́чер m ( kíčer ) ( figuratively )
Maori: pūrekireki ( referring to sedge or reeds in a swamp ) , puia
Mongolian: туг (mn) ( tug )
Norman: toupet m , tun m , tus m
Polish: kępka (pl) f
Portuguese: tufo (pt) m
Romanian: smoc (ro) n , floc (ro) , șuviță (ro) f
Russian: ( feathers, grass, hair ) пучо́к (ru) m ( pučók )
Sicilian: giummu (scn) m , pinnacchiu (scn) m , tuppu (scn) m
Spanish: mechón (es) m ( hair ) , penacho (es) m ( feathers ) , manojo (es) m ( grass ) , haz (es) ( twigs ) , champa (es) f
Swedish: tova (sv) c ( hair ) , tuva (sv) c ( grass )
Thai: please add this translation if you can
Welsh: cudyn m , twffyn m
person wearing the tassel
tuft (third-person singular simple present tufts , present participle tufting , simple past and past participle tufted )
( transitive ) To provide or decorate with a tuft or tufts.
( transitive ) To form into tufts.
( transitive ) To secure and strengthen (a mattress, quilt, etc.) with tufts. This hinders the stuffing from moving.
2017 December 2, “The Impossible Summit of Mt. Neverrest!” (0:13 from the start), in DuckTales , season 1, episode 3:They're never gonna get that Ottoman tufted in time!
( intransitive ) To be formed into tufts.
provide or decorate with tufts
From Old Norse tupt , topt , from Proto-Germanic *tumþiz and/or *tumftō . Doublet of tomt . Compare Faroese toft and Icelandic tóft .
tuft f (definite singular tufta , indefinite plural tufter , definite plural tuftene )
homestead , ground where a house stands
… der han sjølv heve Tufterna gravet og set sjølv sine Hus uppaa deim. … where he has dug the grounds and sets his houses on them.
an earth floor
a plot ( of land ) , site , (building) lot
“tuft” in The Nynorsk Dictionary .
“tuft” in Ivar Aasen (1873) Norsk Ordbog med dansk Forklaring