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Word Meanings - DEPULSE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To drive away. Cockeram.

Related words: (words related to DEPULSE)

  • DRIVEL
    To be weak or foolish; to dote; as, a driveling hero; driveling love. Shak. Dryden. (more info) 1. To slaver; to let spittle drop or flow from the mouth, like a child, idiot, or dotard. 2. Etym:
  • DRIVE
    To dig Horizontally; to cut a horizontal gallery or tunnel. Tomlinson. 7. To pass away; -- said of time. Chaucer. Note: Drive, in all its senses, implies forcible or violent action. It is the reverse of to lead. To drive a body is to move it by
  • DRIVER
    A part that transmits motion to another part by contact with it, or through an intermediate relatively movable part, as a gear which drives another, or a lever which moves another through a link, etc. Specifically: The driving wheel of a locomotive.
  • DRIVEWAY
    A passage or way along or through which a carriage may be driven.
  • DRIVEBOLT
    A drift; a tool for setting bolts home.
  • DRIVEN
    of Drive. Also adj. Driven well, a well made by driving a tube into the earth to an aqueous stratum; -- called also drive well.
  • DRIVEPIPE
    A pipe for forcing into the earth.
  • FORDRIVE
    To drive about; to drive here and there. Rom. of R.
  • FULL-DRIVE
    With full speed.
  • HOME-DRIVEN
    Driven to the end, as a nail; driven close.
  • CONTINENTAL DRIVE
    A transmission arrangement in which the longitudinal crank shaft drives the rear wheels through a clutch, change-speed gear, countershaft, and two parallel side chains, in order.
  • SCREW-DRIVER
    A tool for turning screws so as to drive them into their place. It has a thin end which enters the nick in the head of the screw.
  • MOTOR-DRIVEN
    Driven or actuated by a motor, esp. by an individual electric motor. An electric motor forms an integral part of many machine tools in numerous modern machine shops.
  • OVERDRIVE
    To drive too hard, or far, or beyond strength.
  • WEATHER-DRIVEN
    Driven by winds or storms; forced by stress of weather. Carew.
  • STAKE-DRIVER
    The common American bittern ; -- so called because one of its notes resembles the sound made in driving a stake into the mud. Called also meadow hen, and Indian hen.

 

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