puncher

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punch 1

 (pŭnch)
n.
1. A tool for circular or other piercing: a leather punch.
2. A tool for forcing a pin, bolt, or rivet in or out of a hole.
3. A tool for stamping a design on a surface.
4. A tool for making a countersink.
v. punched, punch·ing, punch·es
v.tr.
1. To make (a hole or opening), as by using a punch or similar implement.
2. To make a hole in (something), as by using a punch: The conductor punched my train ticket.
v.intr.
To pierce something; make a hole or opening: My foot punched through the ice.

[Middle English pounce, punche, from Old French poinçon, ponchon; see puncheon1. V., from Middle English pouncen, punchen, to prick, from Old French poinçoner, ponchoner, to emboss with a punch; see punch2.]

punch′er n.

punch 2

 (pŭnch)
tr.v. punched, punch·ing, punch·es
1.
a. To hit with a sharp blow of the fist.
b. To drive (the fist) into or through something.
c. To drive (a ball, for example) with the fist.
d. To make (a hole) by thrusting the fist.
2.
a. Archaic To poke or prod with a stick.
b. Western US To herd (cattle).
3. To depress (the accelerator of a car) forcefully.
4.
a. To depress (a key or button, for example) in order to activate a device or perform an operation: punched the "repeat" key.
b. To enter (data) by keying: punched in the number on the computer.
5. Baseball To hit (a ball) with a quick short swing.
n.
1. A blow with the fist.
2. Impressive or effective force; impact. See Synonyms at vigor.
Phrasal Verbs:
punch in
1. To check in formally at a job upon arrival.
2. To enter data on a keypad or similar device.
punch out
1. To check out formally at a job upon departure.
2. To hit (someone) with a powerful punch, often so as to render unconscious.
3. Baseball To call (a batter) out on a third strike, often using a punching motion as a signal.
punch up
To enliven or enhance: punched up the report by adding some relevant cartoons.
Idioms:
beat to the punch
To make the first decisive move: a marketing team that beat all the competitors to the punch.
punch the clock
1. To register one's arrive or departure at a job.
2. To be employed at a job with regular hours.

[Middle English punchen, to thrust, prod, prick, from Old French poinçonner, ponchonner, to emboss with a punch, from poinçon, ponchon, pointed tool; see puncheon1.]

punch′less adj.

punch 3

 (pŭnch)
n.
A beverage of fruit juices and sometimes a soft drink or carbonated water, often spiced and mixed with a wine or liquor base.

[From Hindi pañc-, five, probably as used in pañcāmr̥t, a mixture of milk, yogurt, ghee, sugar, and honey used in Hindu ritual, from Sanskrit pañcāmṛtam : pañca, five; see penkwe in Indo-European roots + amṛtam, amrita.]

Punch

 (pŭnch)
n.
The quarrelsome hook-nosed husband of Judy in the comic puppet show Punch and Judy.
Idiom:
pleased as Punch
Highly pleased; gratified.

[Short for Punchinello.]
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Noun1.puncher - a hired hand who tends cattle and performs other duties on horsebackpuncher - a hired hand who tends cattle and performs other duties on horseback
buckaroo, buckeroo, vaquero - local names for a cowboy (`vaquero' is used especially in southwestern and central Texas and `buckaroo' is used especially in California)
cowgirl - a woman cowboy
gaucho - a cowboy of the South American pampas
horse wrangler, wrangler - a cowboy who takes care of the saddle horses
ranch hand - a hired hand on a ranch
roper - a cowboy who uses a lasso to rope cattle or horses
2.puncher - someone who delivers punches
boxer, pugilist - someone who fights with his fists for sport
3.puncher - a tool for making holes or indentations
center punch - a tool with a conical point that is used to make indentations in metal (especially to mark points for drilling)
punch pliers - punch consisting of pliers for perforating paper or leather
tool - an implement used in the practice of a vocation
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
Translations

puncher

[ˈpʌntʃəʳ] N
1. (= tool) → perforadora f; (for leather) → punzón m
2. (= boxer etc) he's a hard puncherpega fuerte
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

puncher

[ˈpʌntʃər] npuncheur mpunching bag n (US) (SPORT)sac m de sablepunch line punch-line, punchline [ˈpʌntʃlaɪn] n [joke] → chute fpunch-up [ˈpʌntʃʌp] n (British)bagarre f
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
References in periodicals archive ?
The punching tool includes round hole punchers for all diameters from M20 to M63 for KDS-KV separable cable glands and square and rectangular hole punchers for all KDSClick, KDS-FB, and KES cable entries as well as for 110 by 131 mm KDS-FP flange plates.
Muscat: High-speed finishes for sprinters, hilly stages for punchers and Green Mountain for climbers.
I've seen crazy hard punchers, and all of boxing understands the difference between a monster puncher and a non-monster puncher.
Items in the office will include old samples and material, scrap paper, stationery items such as hole punchers and staplers that do not work.
Considering that Mayweather is among the stingiest of punchers in boxing, the figures seemed out of this world.
Out to steal the thunder from the main event punchers is crowd-favorite Rey 'Boom Boom' Bautista, who faces Juan Jose Martinez, also of Mexico.
I've written before that the move from light-heavy is fraught with danger as Cleverly wasn't the biggest of punchers at 175lbs.
AMIR Khan has been hit with a parting dig from axed trainer Freddie Roach: Keep away from punchers.
London, Sep 18( ANI ): British boxer Amir Khan's axed coach Freddie Roach has one piece of advice for any trainer who agrees to join the Brit fighter's camp, saying they should keep Khan away from punchers.
Bellew is one of the biggest punchers I've ever seen in the flesh.
She now lives in Germany working at this time as a puncher for Madeira Garnfabrik, giving embroidery design seminars to international groups of punchers and designers.