: the joint between the cannon bone and pastern (as in the horse)
Example Sentences
Recent Examples on the WebNacua had two touchdowns and 98 yards before being sidelined with an ankle injury. Kevin Reynolds, The Salt Lake Tribune, 4 Sep. 2022 The first baseman has a .273/.382/.481 line in 72 games with the WooSox this season, around missing nearly two months in midseason due to an ankle injury. Julian Mcwilliams, BostonGlobe.com, 3 Sep. 2022 Three games later, his season ended because of an ankle injury. Tim Bielik, cleveland, 1 Sep. 2022 Spiller, a fourth-round pick in April, has been dealing with an ankle injury and returned to individual drills in practice this week. Jeff Miller, Los Angeles Times, 31 Aug. 2022 In the first preseason game, Wilcox suffered an ankle injury.The Enquirer, 31 Aug. 2022 That is, until Nix sustained a season-ending ankle injury in mid-November against Mississippi State. Tom Green | Tgreen@al.com, al, 29 Aug. 2022 Oren Burks suffered a knee injury and Curtis Robinson suffered an ankle injury.Chron, 27 Aug. 2022 In Punk’s defeat, AEW shrewdly wove in a storyline that the former world champion possibly returned too soon after being out for months with an ankle injury. Alfred Konuwa, Forbes, 25 Aug. 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Middle English ancle, ankill, perhaps going back to an unattested Old English outcome of Germanic *ankula- (whence Old Frisian & Middle Dutch ankel "ankle," Old High German anchal) alongside *ankila- (whence 16th-century Dutch enckel "ankle," Middle Low German enkel, Old High German enchil) and *ankilōn-, *ankulōn- (whence Old High German anchla, anchala, anchila "ankle," Old Norse ǫkkla), diminutive of a base seen in *ankjōn- (whence Old High German ancha, anca "limb, nape of the neck," Old Norse ekkja "heel"), of uncertain origin
Note: Middle English ancle is often presumed to have been borrowed from a Scandinavian predecessor (with a preserved nasal consonant) of the Norse etymon attested as ǫkkla in Old Icelandic. Complicating the already complex mixture of forms given above are Middle English anclee, anclowe and their modern dialect descendants such as ancliff, ankley, which go back to Old English anclēow, anclēowe "ankle," cognate with Old Frisian onklef, anklef, Middle Dutch anclau, anclief, Old High German anchlao; these appear to show conflation with the outcomes of Germanic *klawō- "claw" (as Old English clawu, clēa "claw, hoof"; see claw entry 1). Germanic *ankula- is usually further identified with Indo-European *h2eng-(e)lo- (see angle entry 1), though the etymon could equally well be derived within Germanic from the base *ank- seen in Old High German ancha. The latter has been connected with Sanskrit áṅgam "limb, member" and aṅgúliḥ, aṅgúriḥ "finger, toe," which appears to have suffixation similar to Germanic *ankula-.
First Known Use
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
Time Traveler
The first known use of ankle was before the 12th century