Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

ball

noun
Around body; a spherical substance, whether natural or artificial; or a body nearly round; as, a ball for play; a ball of thread; a ball of snow.

ball

A bullet; a ball of iron or lead for cannon, muskets.

ball

A printer’s ball, consisting of hair or wool, covered with leather or skin, and fastened to a stock, called a ball-stock, and used to put ink on the types in the forms.

ball

The globe or earth, from its figure.

ball

A globe borne as an ensign of authority; as, to hold the ball of a kingdom.

ball

Any part of the body that is round or protuberant; as, the eye ball; the ball of the thumb or foot.

ball

The weight at the bottom of a pendulum.

ball

Among the Cornish miners in England, a tin mine.

ball

In pyrotechnics, a composition of combustible ingredients, which serve to burn, smoke or give light. Ball-stock, among printers, a stock somewhat hollow at one end, to which balls of skin, stuffed with wool, are fastened, and which serves as a handle. Ball-vein, among miners, a sort of iron ore, found in loose masses, of a circular form, containing sparkling particles. Ball and socket, an instrument used in surveying and astronomy, made of brass, with a perpetual screw, to move horizontally, obliquely, or vertically: . Puff-ball, in botany, the Lycoperdon, a genus of fungeses. Fire-ball, a meteor; a luminous globe darting through the atmosphere; also, a bag of canvas filled with gunpowder, sulphur, pitch, saltpeter, to be thrown by the hand, or from mortars, to set fire to houses.

ball

noun

[Gr. to toss or throw; to leap.]

An entertainment of dancing; originally and peculiarly, at the invitation and expense of an individual; but the word is used in America, for a dance at the expense of the attendants.

ball

verb intransitive
To form into a ball, as snow on horses’ hoofs, or on the feet. We say the horse balls, or the snow balls.