- Main Entry:
- 1wedge

- Pronunciation:
-
\ˈwej\
- Function:
- noun
- Etymology:
- Middle English wegge, from Old English wecg; akin to Old High German wecki wedge, Lithuanian vagis
- Date:
- before 12th century
1: a piece of a substance (as wood or iron) that tapers to a thin edge and is used for splitting wood and rocks, raising heavy bodies, or for tightening by being driven into something2 a: something (as a policy) causing a breach or separation b: something used to initiate an action or development3: something wedge-shaped: as a: an array of troops or tanks in the form of a wedge b: the wedge-shaped stroke in cuneiform characters c: a shoe having a heel extending from the back of the shoe to the front of the shank and a tread formed by an extension of the sole d: an iron golf club with a broad low-angled face for maximum loft 4: a golf shot made with a wedge —called also wedge shot