Arm & hammer platinum slide easy clean up clumping cat litter

1

: a human upper limb

especially : the part between the shoulder and the wrist

2

: something like or corresponding to an arm: such as

a

: the forelimb of a vertebrate

b

: a limb of an invertebrate animal

c

: a branch or lateral shoot of a plant

d

: a slender part of a structure, machine, or an instrument projecting from a main part, axis, or fulcrum

e

: the end of a ship's yard

also : the part of an anchor from the crown to the fluke see anchor illustration

f

: any of the usually two parts of a chromosome lateral to the centromere

3

: an inlet of water (as from the sea)

4

: a narrow extension of a larger area, mass, or group

6

: a support (as on a chair) for the elbow and forearm

8

: the ability to throw or pitch a ball well

also : a player having such ability

9

: a functional division of a group, organization, institution, or activity

the logistical arm of the air force

10

medical : a group of subjects provided a particular treatment in a clinical trial

Since this trial did not include a radiation-only treatment arm, it has been questioned whether radiation therapy alone might be as effective as sequential chemotherapy and radiation therapy in preserving the larynx.

Arm & hammer platinum slide easy clean up clumping cat litter
Everett E. Vokes et al.

transitive verb

1

: to furnish or equip with weapons

2

: to furnish with something that strengthens or protects

arming citizens with the right to vote

3

: to equip or ready for action or operation

arm a bomb

often attributive

1

a

: a means (such as a weapon) of offense or defense

b

: a combat branch (as of an army)

c

: an organized branch of national defense (such as the navy)

2

arms plural

a

: the hereditary heraldic devices of a family

b

: heraldic devices adopted by a government

3

arms plural

a

: active hostilities : warfare

a call to arms

Phrases

arm in arm

: with arms linked together

up in arms

: aroused and ready to undertake a fight or conflict

Synonyms

Example Sentences

Verb They armed the men for battle. The group of fighters was armed by a foreign government. The two countries have been arming themselves for years, but now they have agreed to disarm. We armed ourselves with the tools we would need to survive in the forest. They arm people with accurate information. arming women with the right to vote Once the bomb has been armed, we have five minutes to escape. See More

Word History

Etymology

Noun (1)

Middle English, going back to Old English earm, arm, going back to Germanic *arma-, masculine, (whence also Old Frisian erm "arm," Old Saxon arm, Old High German aram, arm, Old Norse armr, Gothic arms), going back to Indo-European *h2orH-mo-, whence also Old Church Slavic ramo "shoulder," Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian rȁme, stem rȁmen-, Czech ráměk; a parallel zero-grade *h2r̥H-mó- gives Old Prussian irmo "arm," Lithuanian (eastern dialects) ìrmėdė "pain from gout, chill, fever" (irm- "arm" + -ėdė "eating"), Sanskrit īrmá- "arm," Avestan arəma-; Latin armus "forequarter (of an animal), shoulder" probably goes back to *h2erH-mo-

Note: Usually claimed to be a derivative of the verb *h2er- "fit, join" (see arm entry 3)—very plausible semantically—though the Sanskrit and Baltic forms require a second laryngeal (*h2erH-) in the base (cf. Rix et al., Lexikon der indogermanischen Verben, 2. Auflage, Wiesbaden, 2001, where the verbal base is posited without a second laryngeal). Could the suffix be *-H-mo-? The Slavic noun fluctuates in inflection between -mo- and -men- (see André Vaillant, Grammaire comparée des langues slaves, II:1 [Lyon, 1958], pp. 214-15). According to P. Schrijver, The Reflexes of the Proto-Indo-European Laryngeals in Latin (Amsterdam, 1991), p. 194, Latin armus cannot be traced to *h2r̥H-mo-, which would have yielded *ramus. Regarding Armenian armukn "elbow," see H. K. Martirosyan, Etymological Dictionary of the Armenian Inherited Lexicon, Leiden, 2010, s.v.

Verb

Middle English armen, borrowed from Anglo-French armer, going back to Latin armāre, derivative of arma "implements of war, weapons, equipment" — more at arm entry 3

Noun (2)

Middle English armes (plural), "weapons, the military profession, heraldic devices," borrowed from Anglo-French, plural of arme "weapon," going back to Latin arma (neuter plural) "implements of war, weapons, equipment," derivative, with a suffix *-mo-, from a presumed verbal base *ar-, going back to Indo-European *h2er- "fit, join," whence Greek reduplicated aorist ḗraron "(I) fit together, equipped, fit closely" (from which present tense ararískō, ararískein), ármenos (middle participle) "fitting, suited to," and (with suffixed *-smo- giving initial aspiration?) harmós "joint," hárma, harmat- "chariot, team of horses"; Armenian arari "(I) made," aṙnem "I make"

First Known Use

Noun (1)

before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Verb

13th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense 2

Noun (2)

13th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

Time Traveler

The first known use of arm was before the 12th century

Dictionary Entries Near arm

Cite this Entry

“Arm.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/arm. Accessed 28 Oct. 2022.

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Merriam-Webster unabridged

What did ARM stand for?

ARM - an acronym for: Advanced RISC Machines. The processor originated in England in 1984. At its inception ARM stood for Acorn RISC Machine. The first ARM reliant systems include the Acorn: BBC Micro, Masters, and the Archimedes.

Is ARM a UK company?

Arm is a British semiconductor and software design company based in Cambridge, England. Its primary business is in the design of ARM processors (CPUs).

Is ARM owned by Apple?

Like so many companies, Apple is a licensee of Arm, which means it very likely shares competitively sensitive information with Arm, which is seen as a neutral partner.

Is ARM a CPU?

ARM processors are a family of central processing units (CPUs) based on a reduced instruction set computer (RISC) architecture. ARM stands for Advanced RISC Machine.