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knot (n.)

Old English cnotta "intertwining of ropes, cords, etc.," from Proto-Germanic *knuttan- (source also of Low German knütte, Old Frisian knotta "knot," Dutch knot, Old High German knoto, German Knoten, perhaps also Old Norse knutr "knot, knob"). For pronunciation, see kn-.

Figurative sense of "difficult problem, a perplexity" was in Old English (compare Gordian knot). Symbolic of the bond of wedlock from early 13c. As an ornament of dress, first attested c. 1400. Meaning "thickened part or protuberance on tissue of a plant" is from late 14c. As "small group or cluster of persons" late 14c.

The nautical unit of measure of speed (1630s) is from the practice of attaching knotted string to the log line at equal distances (see log (n.2)). The ship's speed can be measured by the number of knots that play out while the sand glass is running.

The distance between the knots on the log-line should contain 1/120 of a mile, supposing the glass to run exactly half a minute. [Jorge Juan and Antonio de Ulloa, "A Voyage to South America" 1760]

Hence the word knot came also to be used as the equivalent of a nautical mile (in pre-World War II use in U.S. and Britain, about 6,080 feet). A speed of 10 knots will cover ten nautical miles in an hour (equivalent to a land speed of about 11.5 mph).

knot (v.)

"to tie in a knot," mid-15c., from knot (n.). Intransitive sense "form into knots" is from 1610s. Related: Knotted (late 12c.), knotting.

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Definitions of knot from WordNet
1
knot (n.)
a tight cluster of people or things;
a small knot of women listened to his sermon
the bird had a knot of feathers forming a crest
knot (n.)
any of various fastenings formed by looping and tying a rope (or cord) upon itself or to another rope or to another object;
knot (n.)
a hard cross-grained round piece of wood in a board where a branch emerged;
the saw buckled when it hit a knot
knot (n.)
(of ships and wind) a unit of speed equal to one nautical mile per hour or about 1.15 statute miles per hour;
knot (n.)
something twisted and tight and swollen;
their muscles stood out in knots
his stomach was in knots
Synonyms: gnarl
knot (n.)
soft lump or unevenness in a yarn; either an imperfection or created by design;
Synonyms: slub / burl
knot (n.)
a sandpiper that breeds in the Arctic and winters in the southern hemisphere;
Synonyms: greyback / grayback / Calidris canutus
2
knot (v.)
make into knots; make knots out of;
She knotted her fingers
knot (v.)
tie or fasten into a knot;
knot the shoelaces
knot (v.)
tangle or complicate;
Synonyms: ravel / tangle
From wordnet.princeton.edu