cross-handed

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See also: crosshanded

English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

cross +‎ handed

Adjective[edit]

cross-handed (not comparable)

  1. Done with hands or forearms crossed over each other.
    • 2013, Dan Joset, Boost Your Driving Range and Master Your Putting, →ISBN:
      The cross-handed grip helps in maintaining the wrist position.
  2. Done by crossing the hand to the other side of the body.
    • 2014, Gordon MacQuarrie, More Stories of the Old Duck Hunters, →ISBN:
      I wonder how it would be to stand right in the beginning of the fast water, at the lip of the pool, and try a cross-handed cast.
  3. Involving two opposing directions.
    • 2011, Alexis Mendez, T. F. Morse, Specialty Optical Fibers Handbook, →ISBN, page 416:
      Appreciable scattering of cross-handed radiation occurred in the middle of the band, leaving regions near the long- and short-wavelength band edges in which scattering of cross-handed radiation was negligible.
  4. (obsolete) Back-handed.
    • 1900, Signs of the Times, and Doctrinal Advocate and Monitor, Volume 68:
      We believe and are thoroughly convinced that God's blessings come to his church in a cross-handed way, entirely different, in many instances, from the way we expect them.

Adverb[edit]

cross-handed (not comparable)

  1. With hands or forearms crossed over each other.
    • 2009, Dr. Craig L. Farnsworth, The Putting Prescription: The Doctor's Proven Method for a Better Stroke, →ISBN, pages 42–43:
      Both Arnold Palmer and Gary Player have been quoted as saying that if they could change one thing about their games, they would have putted cross-handed early in their career.
  2. While crossing the hand to the other side of the body.
    • 2007, James Brady, Warning of War: A Novel of the North China Marines, →ISBN, page 297:
      Joe got them to rig him a holster so he could draw the .45 cross-handed.
  3. In two opposing directions.
  4. (rowing) Facing forward and pushing the oars away from the body on the power stroke (rather than facing backward and pulling the oars on the power stroke).
    • 1844, Rufus Dawes, Nix's Mate: An Historical Romance of America, →ISBN:
      Just then, a sailor, who had crossed the channel, and was making rapid headway, by rowing cross-handed, emerged from behind a merchant vessel which was moored at the wharf.
  5. Idly.
    • 1978, Israel Digest - Volume 21, page 29:
      Why do we sit cross-handed and do nothing which would serve as a basis upon which to build the salvation of our people?
  6. (obsolete) Back-handedly.
    • 1835, The Spiritual magazine, or Saint's Treasury, Volume XI, page 305:
      ..the end has been answered, though the channel of conveyance has been in direct opposition to what I wanted or expected, like as Jacob in blessing Joseph's sons, he wittingly—ah it is wittingly indeed, we are blessed; namely, cross-handed.