Definition of FATHOM

fathom

Plural: fathoms

Noun

  • a linear unit of measurement (equal to 6 feet) for water depth
  • (mining) a unit of volume (equal to 6 cubic feet) used in measuring bodies of ore
  • A man's armspan, generally reckoned to be six feet (about 1.8 metres). Later used to measure the depth of water, but now generally replaced by the metre outside American usage.
  • A man's armspan, generally reckoned to be six feet (about 1.8 metres). Later used to measure the depth of water, but now generally replaced by the metre outside American usage.
  • An internationally standardized version of this unit, the international fathom (= 1.8288 metres = 6 feet).
  • A measure of distance to shore: the nearest point to shore at which the water depth is the value quoted.
  • An unspecified depth.
  • Depth of insight; mental reach or scope.
  • The act of stretching out one's arms away from the sides of the torso so that they make a straight line perpendicular to the body.
  • Someone or something that is embraced.
  • Control, grasp.

Verb

Verb Forms: fathomed, fathoming, fathoms

  • To understand a difficult problem after much thought.
  • come to understand
  • measure the depth of (a body of water) with a sounding line
  • To measure the depth of (water); to take a sounding of; to sound.
  • To encircle (someone or something) with outstretched arms; specifically, to measure the circumference or (rare) length of something.
  • Often followed by out: to deeply understand (someone or something); to get to the bottom of.
  • To embrace (someone or something).
  • To measure a depth; to sound.
  • To conduct an examination or inquiry; to investigate.

Examples

  • After we'd rowed for an hour, we found ourselves stranded ten fathoms from shore.
  • He struggled to FATHOM how his opponent kept finding such perfect words with seemingly random tiles.
  • I can’t for the life of me fathom what this means.

Origin / Etymology

From Middle English fathome, fadom, fadme (“unit of length of about six feet; depth of six feet for nautical soundings; (loosely) cubit; ell”) [and other forms], from Old English fæþm, fæþme (“encircling or outstretched arms, bosom, embrace; envelopment; control, grasp, power; fathom (unit of measurement); cubit”) [and other forms], from Proto-West Germanic *faþm (“outstretched arms, embrace; fathom (unit of measurement)”), from Proto-Germanic *faþmaz (“outstretched arms, embrace; fathom (unit of measurement)”), from Proto-Indo-European *pet-, *peth₂- (“to spread out; to fly”).
Cognates
* Ancient Greek πέταλος (pétalos, “broad; flat”), πετᾰ́ννῡμῐ (petắnnūmĭ, “to open; to spread out; to be dispersed or scattered”) (whence English petal)
* Gothic 𐍆𐌰𐌸𐌰 (faþa, “fench; hedge”)
* Latin pateō (“to extend, increase; to be accessible, attainable, open; to be exposed, vulnerable”)
* Low German fadem, faem (“cubit; thread”)
* Middle Dutch vadem (modern Dutch vaam, vadem (“fathom”))
* Norwegian Bokmål favn (“an embrace; a fathom”)
* Old Frisian fethm (“outstretched arms”)
* Old High German fadam, fadum (“cubit”) (Middle High German vade (“enclosure”), vadem, vaden, modern German Faden (“fathom; filament, thread”))
* Old Norse faþmr (Danish favn (“an embrace; a fathom”), Icelandic faðmur (“an embrace”), Swedish famn (“the arms, bosom; an embrace”))
* Old Welsh etem (“thread”)

Synonyms

bottom, fthm, penetrate, sound, brace, braza, estadio, figure out, orguia, puzzle out, stade, toise, work out

Scrabble Score: 14

fathom: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Word
fathom: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
fathom: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary

Words With Friends Score: 14

fathom: valid Words With Friends Word