Balls are objects typically used in games. They are usually
spherical but can be
ovoid. In most
games using balls, the play of the game follows the state of the ball as it is hit, kicked or thrown by players. Balls can also be used for simpler activities, such as catch,
marbles and
juggling. Balls made from hard-wearing
metal are used in
engineering applications to provide frictionless bearings, known as
ball bearings.
Although many types of balls are today made from rubber, this form was unknown outside the Americas until after the voyages of Columbus. The Spanish were the first Europeans to see bouncing rubber balls (albeit solid and not inflated) which were employed most notably in the Mesoamerican ballgame. Balls used in various sports in other parts of the world prior to Columbus were made from other materials such as animal bladders or skins, stuffed with various materials.
Etymology
The first known use of the word
ball in English in the sense of a globular body that is played with was in 1205 in in the phrase, "" The word came from the
Middle English bal (inflected as
ball-e, -es, in turn from
Old Norse böllr (compare Old Swedish
baller, and Swedish
boll) from
Proto-Germanic ballu-z, (whence probably Middle High German
bal, ball-es, Middle Dutch
bal), a
cognate with
Old High German ballo, pallo, Middle High German balle from Proto-Germanic
*ballon (weak masculine), and Old High German
ballâ, pallâ, Middle High German
balle, Proto-Germanic
*ballôn (weak feminine). No Old English representative of any of these is known. (The answering forms in Old English would have been
beallu, -a, -e -- compare
bealluc, ballock.) If
ball- was native in Germanic, it may have been a cognate with the Latin
foll-is in sense of a "thing blown up or inflated." In the later Middle English spelling
balle the word coincided graphically with the French
balle "ball" and "bale" which has hence been erroneously assumed to be its source. French
balle (but not
boule) is assumed to be of Germanic origin, itself, however.
Images
See also