: a forked bone in front of the breastbone in a bird consisting chiefly of the two clavicles fused at their median or lower end
2
: a variation of the T formation in which the halfbacks line up farther from the line of scrimmage than the fullback does
Illustration of wishbone
W wishbone 1
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Cast in sterling silver, each piece is modeled on the bone of the area of the body where it will be worn — with a statement choker in the form of a wishbone, earrings modeled on ear bones found in avians and rings shaped after the bones of the feet.—Alex Wynne, Footwear News, 26 Jan. 2026 Senior digital design editor Zoë Sessums snagged her wishbone chairs at a small antique sale in Maine, and after repairs to the paper cord seats, the Danish beauties were as good as new.—Audrey Lee, Architectural Digest, 22 Jan. 2026 The converted wishbone quarterback rushed for an astounding 114 yards with three TDs.—Chris Winters, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 6 Dec. 2025 Hundreds of years later, writes Panati, the Romans adopted similar traditions from the Etruscans, who by then had begun snapping the wishbone, which some experts say may have started to preserve the finite resource of birds.—Katie Wiseman, IndyStar, 25 Nov. 2025 See All Example Sentences for wishbone
Word History
Etymology
from the superstition that when two persons pull it apart the one getting the longer fragment will have a wish granted