Dictionary
 Open and Collaborative
 Home page

Meaning of tobogán




Danilo Enrique Noreña Benítez

tobogán
  9

Dellizer ramp . It is the name of a flat, delimited and inclined surface on which children can slide playing, usually seated. Also called a slide, slide, or gutter. In some cases it has curves to increase the fun. The word is of Algonquian origin.

  




furoya

While at first it would be a sled to slide through the snow, over time it became a game to slide down a ramp, which can have different heights and end up in the water, the sand, a baseball player, . . . The inventor seems to have been the American Herbert Selner who built it next to a lake in Minnesota and named it Water-Toboggan-Slide. Actually, the toboggan is not English but is taken from the Canadian French tabagnne, an interpretation of the Inuktitut topakan with which the native Algonquin Micmac called their sleds. See inuk . It is also used as a metaphor for a somewhat slower descent of position than a free fall, but just as inevitable.

  



  ADD NEW MEANING  




       

          


This website uses your own and third party cookies to optimize your navigation, adapt to your preferences and perform analytical work. As we continue to navigate, we understand that you accept our Cookies Policies