pigskin

English

Etymology

Compound of pig +‎ skin. The American football is a direct descendant of the ball used in the game of rugby. The rugby ball originally was made of a pig’s bladder with a leather cover; the earliest versions of the leather exterior sometimes were made of pigskin.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpɪɡˌskɪn/
  • Audio (General Australian):(file)

Noun

pigskin (plural pigskins)

  1. The skin of a pig.
    • 2009, Zushe Yosef Blech, Kosher Food Production, page 318:
      In addition, most gelatins made today are produced from pigskins, which are not subject to this consideration.
  2. Leather made from the skin of a pig.
    Synonym: hoghide
    • 2016, Robert Maddock, The 1,300 Years’ War: Volume One:
      Those killed fighting his troops would be buried in pigskins.
  3. (US, slang) A football.
    • 1998, Kenneth Judd, Numerical Methods in Economics, MIT Press, →ISBN, page 29:
      To paraphrase a renowned pigskin philosopher, speed is not everything, it is the only thing.
    • 2011, J. H. Holland, Dsi: Diddly Squat Investigation, page 35:
      “We gotta find those pigskins!” Squat insisted. “Pigskins?” Diddly asked. With obvious disdain, Squat replied, “Yeah, you know, that is what they call footballs, dummy.”

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