資料來源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
3. A bicycle or a tricycle; a velocipede.
4. A rolling or revolving body; anything of a circular form;
a disk; an orb. --Milton.
5. A turn revolution; rotation; compass.
According to the common vicissitude and wheel of
things, the proud and the insolent, after long
trampling upon others, come at length to be trampled
upon themselves. --South.
[He] throws his steep flight in many an a["e]ry
wheel. --Milton.
{A wheel within a wheel}, or {Wheels within wheels}, a
complication of circumstances, motives, etc.
{Balance wheel}. See in the Vocab.
{Bevel wheel}, {Brake wheel}, {Cam wheel}, {Fifth wheel},
{Overshot wheel}, {Spinning wheel}, etc. See under {Bevel},
{Brake}, etc.
{Core wheel}. (Mach.)
(a) A mortise gear.
(b) A wheel having a rim perforated to receive wooden
cogs; the skeleton of a mortise gear.
{Measuring wheel}, an odometer, or perambulator.
{Wheel and axle} (Mech.), one of the elementary machines or
mechanical powers, consisting of a wheel fixed to an axle,
and used for raising great weights, by applying the power
to the circumference of the wheel, and attaching the
weight, by a rope or chain, to that of the axle. Called
also {axis in peritrochio}, and {perpetual lever}, -- the
principle of equilibrium involved being the same as in the
lever, while its action is continuous. See {Mechanical
powers}, under {Mechanical}.
{Wheel animal}, or {Wheel animalcule} (Zo["o]l.), any one of
numerous species of rotifers having a ciliated disk at the
anterior end.
{Wheel barometer}. (Physics) See under {Barometer}.
{Wheel boat}, a boat with wheels, to be used either on water
or upon inclined planes or railways.
{Wheel bug} (Zo["o]l.), a large North American hemipterous
insect ({Prionidus cristatus}) which sucks the blood of
other insects. So named from the curious shape of the
prothorax.
{Wheel carriage}, a carriage moving on wheels.
{Wheel chains}, or {Wheel ropes} (Naut.), the chains or ropes
connecting the wheel and rudder.
{Wheel cutter}, a machine for shaping the cogs of gear
wheels; a gear cutter.
{Wheel horse}, one of the horses nearest to the wheels, as
opposed to a leader, or forward horse; -- called also
{wheeler}.
{Wheel lathe}, a lathe for turning railway-car wheels.
{Wheel lock}.
(a) A letter lock. See under {Letter}.
(b) A kind of gunlock in which sparks were struck from a
flint, or piece of iron pyrites, by a revolving wheel.
(c) A kind of brake a carriage.
{Wheel ore} (Min.), a variety of bournonite so named from the
shape of its twin crystals. See {Bournonite}.
{Wheel pit} (Steam Engine), a pit in the ground, in which the
lower part of the fly wheel runs.
{Wheel plow}, or {Wheel plough}, a plow having one or two
wheels attached, to render it more steady, and to regulate
the depth of the furrow.
{Wheel press}, a press by which railway-car wheels are forced
on, or off, their axles.
{Wheel race}, the place in which a water wheel is set.
{Wheel rope} (Naut.), a tiller rope. See under {Tiller}.
{Wheel stitch} (Needlework), a stitch resembling a spider's
web, worked into the material, and not over an open space.
--Caulfeild & S. (Dict. of Needlework).
{Wheel tree} (Bot.), a tree ({Aspidosperma excelsum}) of
Guiana, which has a trunk so curiously fluted that a
transverse section resembles the hub and spokes of a
coarsely made wheel. See {Paddlewood}.
{Wheel urchin} (Zo["o]l.), any sea urchin of the genus
{Rotula} having a round, flat shell.
{Wheel window} (Arch.), a circular window having radiating
mullions arranged like the spokes of a wheel. Cf. {Rose
window}, under {Rose}.
Brake \Brake\ (br[=a]k), n. [OE. brake; cf. LG. brake an
instrument for breaking flax, G. breche, fr. the root of E.
break. See Break, v. t., and cf. {Breach}.]
1. An instrument or machine to break or bruise the woody part
of flax or hemp so that it may be separated from the
fiber.
2. An extended handle by means of which a number of men can
unite in working a pump, as in a fire engine.
3. A baker's kneading though. --Johnson.
4. A sharp bit or snaffle.
Pampered jades . . . which need nor break nor bit.
--Gascoigne.
5. A frame for confining a refractory horse while the smith
is shoeing him; also, an inclosure to restrain cattle,
horses, etc.
A horse . . . which Philip had bought . . . and
because of his fierceness kept him within a brake of
iron bars. --J. Brende.
6. That part of a carriage, as of a movable battery, or
engine, which enables it to turn.
7. (Mil.) An ancient engine of war analogous to the crossbow
and ballista.
8. (Agric.) A large, heavy harrow for breaking clods after
plowing; a drag.
9. A piece of mechanism for retarding or stopping motion by
friction, as of a carriage or railway car, by the pressure
of rubbers against the wheels, or of clogs or ratchets
against the track or roadway, or of a pivoted lever
against a wheel or drum in a machine.
10. (Engin.) An apparatus for testing the power of a steam
engine, or other motor, by weighing the amount of
friction that the motor will overcome; a friction brake.
11. A cart or carriage without a body, used in breaking in
horses.
12. An ancient instrument of torture. --Holinshed.
{Air brake}. See {Air brake}, in the Vocabulary.
{Brake beam} or {Brake bar}, the beam that connects the brake
blocks of opposite wheels.
{Brake block}.
(a) The part of a brake holding the brake shoe.
(b) A brake shoe.
{Brake shoe} or {Brake rubber}, the part of a brake against
which the wheel rubs.
{Brake wheel}, a wheel on the platform or top of a car by
which brakes are operated.
{Continuous brake} . See under {Continuous}.