: having (such) a point or (so many) points of origin
endarch
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As a prefix, arch- appears in a number of titles referring to positions of superiority, such as archduke and archbishop; it can also mean "chief" (as in archnemesis) or "extreme" (archconservative). It comes from the Greek verb archein, meaning "to begin or to rule."
Noun
There was a slight arch to her eyebrows.
an arch in the cat's back Verb
The cat arched its back.
She arched her eyebrows in surprise.
A tree arches over the road.
She arched backward to begin the exercise. Adjective
a politician known for his arch humor
The novel is never mocking or arch in its tone.
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Noun
The D’Orsay pump is a timeless design in which the vamp is cut away on the sides, leaving the arch and the side of the foot exposed, adding a twist to the classic stiletto shape.—Karla Rodriguez, Footwear News, 14 Nov. 2025 The plan was for the company’s new SUV to be filmed ascending Tianmen Mountain’s famous 999 steps up to the natural arch known as Heaven’s Gate, located in Zhangjiajie, Central China's Hunan Province.—Jack Beresford, MSNBC Newsweek, 14 Nov. 2025
Verb
Plans include two scenic overlooks of Leavenworth and arched blue railing to echo the current bridge.—Eleanor Nash, Kansas City Star, 29 Oct. 2025 The Canadian cultural mosaic, in which distinct identities exist parallel to an over-arching nationalism, further offered an alternative to the melting pot model found south of the border.—Dónal Gill, The Dial, 28 Oct. 2025
Adjective
There are no footbeds or arch support, but that hasn’t stopped me from jogging through airports, putting dozens of city miles on them, or wandering the lower reaches of Jackon’s Snow King Mountain (the rubber is surprisingly grippy).—Lily Ritter, Outside, 18 Nov. 2025 Best Fashion Deals Hoka Kawana 2 Shoppers say these Hoka sneakers provide incredible arch support and can be worn walking, running, working out, and hiking.—Izzy Baskette, PEOPLE, 15 Nov. 2025 See All Example Sentences for arch
Word History
Etymology
Noun and Verb
Middle English arche, from Anglo-French, from Vulgar Latin *arca, from Latin arcus — more at arrow
Middle English arche-, arch-, from Old English & Anglo-French; Old English arce-, from Late Latin arch- & Latin archi-; Anglo-French arch-, from Late Latin arch- & Latin archi-, from Greek arch-, archi-, from archein to begin, rule; akin to Greek archē beginning, rule, archos ruler
Noun combining form
Middle English -arche, from Anglo-French & Late Latin & Latin; Anglo-French -arche, from Late Latin -archa, from Latin -arches, -archus, from Greek -archēs, -archos, from archein
: an anatomical structure that resembles an arch in form or function: as
a
: either of two vaulted portions of the bony structure of the foot that impart elasticity to it:
(1)
: a longitudinal arch supported posteriorly by the basal tuberosity of the calcaneus and anteriorly by the heads of the metatarsal bones
(2)
: a transverse arch consisting of the metatarsals and first row of tarsals and resulting from elevation of the central anterior portion of the median longitudinal arch
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