单词 | drift |
释义 | driftn. I. The action of driving, etc. 1. a. The act of driving; propulsion, impulse, impetus. (Now rare or Obsolete except as in 1b, or 2a.) ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impelling or driving > [noun] > impulse drifta1400 swafea1400 impulse1650 brangle1652 drive1685 a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) l. 496 Þar þai drey ful hard drift. c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 132/1 Dryfte, or drywynge of bestys, minatus. c1450 (c1400) Sowdon of Babylon (1881) l. 76 A drift of wedir us droffe to Rome. 1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Surueyeng ix. f. 9v As the whele gothe by drifte of water. 1694 R. South 12 Serm. II. 491 A Man, being under the Drift of any Passion, will still follow the Impulse of it. 1721 J. Perry Acct. Stopping Daggenham Breach 26 The Breach..was stop'd by..the drift of a Row of large Piles, drove near to each other. 1858 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 19 ii. 296 Sheep for the Smithfield Monday market had to leave their homes on the previous Wednesday or Thursday week. Such a long drift..caused a great waste of meat. b. Forest Law. The driving of the cattle within the precincts of a forest to one place on a particular day, for the determination of ownership, levying of fines, etc. (Cf. drive v. 4b.) ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > animal keeping practices general > herding, pasturing, or confining > [noun] > droving drift1540 droving1633 drive1837 drovership1838 drovering1850 drove1905 1540 Act 32 Hen. VIII c. 13 §4 It shalbe laufull to the said lordis owners and possessioners of the said forrestis and chaces..to make like drifte of the said forestis, chaces. 1598 J. Manwood Treat. Lawes Forrest xv. f. 86 The Officers of the Forest..did use to make two driftes of their Forrest euery yeare. 1776 Customs Manor Epworth in Stonehouse Axholme (1839) 145 The Lord is entitled to make one drift of the commons, between May-day and Midsummer, in order to ascertain whose cattle are pasturing thereon. 1887 W. F. Collier Venville Rights on Dartmoor in Trans. Devonshire Assoc. XIX. 382 The moor~man then proceeds to summon the venville tenants to join in the drift by blowing horns on the tors. 1894 Q. Rev. Apr. 418 Assisting at the ‘drifts’ in which the horned cattle and ponies are collected, branded, and the ‘strays’ returned to their owners. ΚΠ 1772 C. Hutton Princ. Bridges 60 The thickness of the pier necessary to resist the drift of the arch. 1772 C. Hutton Princ. Bridges 91 Drift, Shoot, or Thrust of an arch, is the push or force which it exerts in the direction of the length of the bridge. 1823 P. Nicholson New Pract. Builder 338. 2. a. The fact or condition of being driven, as by a current; the action of drifting; a slow course or current. Also figurative. on or upon the drift = adrift adv. and adj. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > moving with current of air or water > [noun] drift1555 drifting1820 driftage1862 the world > the earth > water > flow or flowing > current > [noun] > fact or condition of being carried by drift1555 drifting1820 1555 J. Heywood Two Hundred Epigrammes with Thyrde sig. C.i Beware dryft to the worst shore. 1633 T. James Strange Voy. 100 We considered where we might haue the cleerest drift..and let her driue. 1659 D. Pell Πελαγος 305 Anchors give way, and so [ships] are most dreadfully put upon the drift. 1721 J. Perry Acct. Stopping Daggenham Breach 75 A considerable Frost and drift of Ice..that Winter. 1860 M. F. Maury Physical Geogr. Sea (ed. 8) §107 The effect of moderate winds..is to cause what may be called the drift of the sea rather than a current. Drift is confined to surface waters. 1886 Pall Mall Gaz. 18 Feb. 11/1 There is a steady low-class labour drift into London. b. Nautical. The deviation of a ship from its course in consequence of currents; esp. in reference to its amount. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > directing or managing a ship > [noun] > course > deviation or drift sag1589 leeway1669 drift1671 driftway1721 leeward-way1727 sagging1769 driftage1862 1671 J. Narborough Jrnl. in Acct. Several Late Voy. (1711) i. 174 True Course, Drift and all Impediments allow'd, is, [etc.] 1793 J. Rennell in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 83 195 On the 31st of January, when lying to, 36 miles are allowed for 20 hours drift, to the north-west. 1859–62 T. Lewin Invasion Brit. 82 The maximum drift for a single tide [in the English Channel]..is eighteen miles, and the minimum nine miles. c. Gunnery. The constant deviation of an elongated rotating projectile in the direction of its rotation; = derivation n.2 ΚΠ 1864 Daily Tel. 4 May The hexagonal shot is far more limited with regard to lateral drift or deflection than the other two kinds of shot. 1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. d. A slow variation of the characteristics or operation of an electric circuit or device. Also attributive. Originally U.S. ΚΠ 1889 in Cent. Dict. 1892 Jrnl. Franklin Inst. 134 482 This magnification varies with the sensibility and is largest when the instrument is most sensitive. In galvanometer work this phenomenon is known as the ‘drift’ of the needles. 1931 Physical Rev. 37 396 This drift is normally very constant, so that an input current as small as 10—16 amp can be measured by noting the change in the rate of drift which it causes. 1932 Rev. Sci. Instruments III. 420 The degree to which the circuit is balanced is determined by noting the back and forth drift which a high sensitivity galvanometer will make, due to natural battery voltage fluctuations. 1962 J. H. Simpson & R. S. Richards Physical Princ. Junction Transistors xiii. 310 The chief problem in the design of amplifiers to pass d.c. is to reduce slow changes in the operating conditions of the transistors to a minimum. These changes..are called drifts. 1963 B. Fozard Instrumentation Nucl. Reactors xi. 133 More commonly some form of automatic drift-correction circuit is used. 1970 J. Earl How to choose Tuners & Amplifiers ii. 31 This..is in receipt of a stabilised voltage (to avoid tuning drift). e. Aeronautics (a) = head resistance n. at head n.1 Compounds 4; (b) the horizontal deviation of an aircraft from its course in consequence of winds and air currents; also, the rate or amount of such deviation. ΘΚΠ society > travel > air or space travel > action of flying (in) aircraft > navigation of course of aircraft > [noun] > course > horizontal deviation from course drift1891 1891 O. Chanute Aerial Navigation 26 How much of this new pressure..opposes forward progress, and may be denominated drift. 1896 H. S. Maxim in J. Means Epitome of Aeronaut. Ann. (1910) 113 The aeroplane..in which the drift will go the greatest number of times into the lift will be considered the most satisfactory. 1909 Westm. Gaz. 25 Feb. 4/1 The daring plan of jumping off a hill 45 ft. high with the object of ascertaining the proportion between lift and drift. 1916 H. Barber Aeroplane Speaks 2 There's Drift, my horizontal component, sometimes, though rather erroneously, called Head Resistance. 1916 H. Barber Aeroplane Speaks 57 The Drift..must be overcome by the Thrust in order to secure the necessary velocity to produce the requisite lift for flight. 1920 19th Cent. July 145 The object of camber is to obtain the maximum lift, and to reduce the drift. 1958 ‘N. Shute’ Rainbow & Rose ii. 41 We had about fifteen degrees of drift. 1968 G. D. P. Worthington Airline Instrument Flying xiii. 191 If drift has been correctly allowed for and time and rate of turn are correct, the aircraft should be on the correct track when it comes out of the turn. f. Astronomy. Originally: any group of stars having a random distribution of velocities; usually applied to a group of stars with an apparent systematic motion towards some point in the sky superimposed on their motion within the group, some or all of the nearest stars belonging to one or other of two such groups with opposite directions of motion. ΘΚΠ the world > the universe > star > stellar motion > [noun] proper motion1561 star drift1829 star stream1844 motus peculiaris1890 star streaming1905 drift1906 1906 A. S. Eddington in Monthly Notices Royal Astron. Soc. LXVII. 35 I define a ‘drift of stars’ to be a system of stars whose velocities relative to some system of axes are quite haphazard. 1906 A. S. Eddington in Monthly Notices Royal Astron. Soc. LXVII. 40 Kapteyn..found this same disagreement, and pointed out the explanation—that there are really two drifts of stars. 1928 E. A. Fath Elem. Astron. (ed. 2) xv. 236 The motions of the stars in any drift are not along parallel lines... But when the group is taken as a whole it shows a decided group motion toward its vertex. 1938 W. M. Smart Stellar Dynamics iv. 106 In most regions of the sky it is found that one drift (drift I) is usually more prominent than the other. 1968 D. S. Evans Observ. Mod. Astron. iv. 137 The two drifts which describe the motion of stars relatively near the Sun are both considered to be in motion relative to the Sun. g. In the migration of birds: the influence of wind currents. ΚΠ 1918 E. V. Baxter & L. J. Rintoul in Ibis 6 255 We do not consider that the direction of the wind, apart from its force, stops birds migrating... We believe that the deviation from the direct route is largely, perhaps mainly, due to drift. 1960 E. Ennion House on Shore v. 66 Their capture..has gone a long way to establish the reality of ‘Drift’. 1971 Nature 30 Apr. 580/2 Waders and waterfowl..frequently correct for drift in winds of moderate speed. h. Motor Racing. A controlled slide. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > racing with vehicles > motor racing > [noun] > actions pit stop1915 drift1955 1955 Motor Trend Jan. 33 I steer into the drift, accelerating slightly. 1957 S. Moss In Track of Speed v. 61 He was a great exponent of the ‘drift’. He was always fastest out of a bend, having discovered the art of pointing the car to the ensuing straight before he was fully round. 1957 Life (U.S.) 15 Aug. 83/1 When Fangio puts his Maserati or Ferrari into a corner in a four-wheel drift (i.e., with all wheels skidding). 3. a. figurative. Natural or unconscious course, progress, process (of action, argument, †time, etc.); esp. in reference to direction or probable result: Tendency. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > existence > state or condition > tendency > [noun] kinda1200 disposingc1380 disposition1393 aptc1400 hieldc1400 remotiona1425 inclination?a1439 incliningc1450 taste1477 intendment1509 benta1535 swing1538 approclivity1546 aptness1548 swinge1548 drift1549 set1567 addiction1570 disposedness1583 swaya1586 leaning1587 intention1594 inflection1597 inclinableness1608 appetite1626 vogue1626 tendency1628 tendence1632 aptitude1633 gravitation1644 propension1644 biasing1645 conducement1646 flexure1652 propendency1660 tend1663 vergencya1665 pend1674 to have a way of1748 polarity1767 appetency1802 drive1885 overleaning1896 1549 M. Coverdale et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. II. 2 Cor. xii. f. lxi Since the drifte of myne epistle hath brought me to the visions and reuelacions of the Lorde Jesus. ?1578 W. Patten Let. Entertainm. Killingwoorth 63 Such a drift of tyme was thear passed. 1594 T. Bowes tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. II. 5 That Epicurean doctrine, whose only drift is..to turne men from all religion. 1796 E. Burke Two Lett. Peace Regicide Directory France i. 101 The whole drift of their institution is contrary to that of the wise Legislators of all countries. 1890 T. W. Reid Life Ld. Houghton (ed. 2) I. x. 441 The general drift of affairs on the Continent. b. Philology. (See quot. 1921.) ΘΚΠ the mind > language > [noun] > linguistic change > specific features or processes involved in analogy1569 deflection1603 epenthesis1656 sandhi1806 relic1835 anamorphosis1862 metanalysis1914 drift1921 adstratum1939 grammaticalization1955 relexification1962 1921 E. Sapir Lang. vii. 165 The drift of a language is constituted by the unconscious selection on the part of its speakers of those individual variations that are cumulative in some special direction. 1926 Language 2 133 We find the same drift at work from analysis to synthesis, from monosyllabism to polysyllabism. 1961 L. F. Brosnahan Sounds of Lang. vii. 155 These great trends, or drifts.., are some of the most interesting phenomena of historical linguistics. 4. a. The conscious direction of action or speech to some end; the end itself; what one is ‘driving at’; purpose, intention, object, aim. (Now rare, except in reference to speech or writing: see also 1b.) ΘΚΠ the mind > will > intention > [noun] > intention or purpose > end, purpose, or object willeOE errand?c1225 purposec1300 endc1305 emprisec1330 intentc1340 use1340 conclusionc1374 studya1382 pointc1385 causec1386 gamea1393 term?c1400 businessc1405 finec1405 intentionc1410 object?a1425 obtent?a1475 drift1526 intend1526 respect1528 flight1530 finality?1541 stop1551 scope1559 butt?1571 bent1579 aiming point1587 pursuitc1592 aim1595 devotion1597 meaning1605 maina1610 attempt1610 design1615 purport1616 terminusa1617 intendment1635 pretence1649 ettle1790 big (also great) idea1846 objective1878 objective1882 the name of the game1910 the object of the exercise1958 thrust1968 1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection iii. sig. LLLi To imagyne..what is the dryft of the kyng in his parlyament. 1596 W. Warner Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) ix. xlviii. 225 Our drift (quoth he) a Conquest is. 1781 W. Cowper Let. 19 Oct. (1979) I. 532 My sole drift is to be useful. 1855 Ld. Tennyson Maud iv. viii, in Maud & Other Poems 19 The drift of the Maker is dark, an Isis hid by the veil. b. Meaning, purport, tenor, scope (of a speech or writing). Now the usual sense. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > meaning > meaning of linguistic unit > drift, tenor, purport > [noun] sentence?c1225 intent1303 tenora1387 intendment1390 strengthc1390 porta1393 meaningc1395 process1395 continencea1398 purposec1400 substance1415 purport1422 matterc1450 storyc1450 containing1477 contenu1477 retinue1484 fecka1500 content1513 drift1526 intention1532 vein1543 importing1548 scope1549 importance1552 course1553 force1555 sense?1556 file1560 intelliment?1562 proporta1578 preport1583 import1588 importment1602 carriage1604 morala1616 significancy1641 amount1678 purview1688 sentiment1713 capacity1720 spirit1742 message1828 thrust1968 messaging1977 1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection Pref. sig. Aiv Harde it is..to perceyue the processe and dryft of this treatise. 1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. ix. 193 The main drift and scope of these pamphlets..was to defame and disgrace the English Prelates. 1768 O. Goldsmith Good Natur'd Man iii. 35 I see the whole drift of your argument. 1868 A. Helps Realmah I. vi. 155 I cannot see the general drift and purpose of the story. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > intention > planning > [noun] > a plan redeeOE devicec1290 casta1300 went1303 ordinancec1385 intentc1386 imaginationa1393 drifta1535 draught1535 forecast1535 platform1547 ground-plat?a1560 table1560 convoy1565 design1565 plat1574 ground-plota1586 plot1587 reach1587 theory1593 game1595 projectment1611 projecting1616 navation1628 approach1633 view1634 plan1635 systema1648 sophism1657 manage1667 brouillon1678 speculationa1684 sketch1697 to take measures1698 method1704 scheme1704 lines1760 outline1760 measure1767 restorative1821 ground plan1834 strategy1834 programme1837 ticket1842 project1849 outline plan1850 layout1867 draft1879 dart1882 lurk1916 schema1939 lick1955 a1535 T. More Hist. Richard III in Wks. (1557) 40/1 That drifte by the Quene not vnwisely deuised. ?1548 J. Bale Comedy Thre Lawes Nature iv. sig. Eij Now wyll I contryue, the dryft of an other playe. 1603 R. Knolles Gen. Hist. Turkes 647 Beware that by their wily drifts thou perish not. 1674 N. Fairfax Treat. Bulk & Selvedge 193 Those..hallowed drifts, and everlasting well wishes for the happiness of..sinful man. ΚΠ a1558 Queen Mary I Answ. Thomworth in Keith Hist. Ch. Scot. (1734) App. 102 (Jam.) Scho intendit na drift of tyme. 1591 R. Bruce Serm. Edinb. sig. V5 Lang drift and delay of thinges hoped for. 1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. x. 484 These promises..were to be performed againe Michaelmasse..But this day come he continued his drifts. II. That which is driven. 7. A number of animals driven or moving along in a body; a drove, herd, flock, †flight (of birds), †swarm (of bees). Rarely of persons. Obsolete or dialect. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > animals collectively > [noun] > herd or flock > of domestic animals herda1000 droveOE flock1340 drift?c1450 town herd1605 the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun] > group > specifically of people eschelec1330 assortec1450 drift?c1450 flight1577 squader1590 squadron1617 group1711 platoon1711 squad1809 cuadrilla1838 clutch1908 ?c1450 Life St. Cuthbert (1891) l. 5840 Þar ran sixten men in a dryft. 1486 Bk. St. Albans F vj A Dryft of tame Swyne. 1552 Abp. J. Hamilton Catech. i. ii. f. 8 Cursit is the drift of thine Oxin. 1613 Bp. J. Hall Holy Panegyrick 45 Whole driftes of quailes. 1725 D. Defoe New Voy. round World ii. 158 Marks of Cattle having pass'd there, as if they had gone in Drifts or Droves. 1816 W. Scott Let. 16 May (1932) IV. 234 To think of carrying off a drift of my neighbours sheep. 1828 W. Carr Dial. Craven (ed. 2) Drift, a drove of cattle. 8. a. A shower (of rain, snow, dust, etc.) driven along by the wind; a driving mass. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > dry weather or climate > [noun] > dust-storm or sand-storm > dust driven before the wind drifta1400 spindrift1961 the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > precipitation or atmospheric moisture > rain > [noun] > a or the fall of rain > shower > driving or slanting drifta1400 scud1687 slanting1980 a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 22462 Þar sal fall dun fra þe lijft A blodi rain, a dreri drift. 1569 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. x. 320 In snaw, sleit, drift, wind, froist, hailstanis and rane. a1616 W. Shakespeare King John (1623) ii. i. 413 Our Thunder..Shall raine their drift of bullets on this Towne. View more context for this quotation 1725 W. Broome in A. Pope et al. tr. Homer Odyssey II. viii. 128 Drifts of rising dust involve the sky. 1842 Ld. Tennyson Talking Oak ii, in Poems (new ed.) II. 64 The city lies, Beneath its drift of smoke. 1886 J. Ruskin Præterita I. ix. 290 Exposed to drift of rain under violent..wind. b. An accumulation of snow, sand, etc., driven together by the wind. (In quot. a1644 applied to a bed or vein of metal.) Also transferred. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > structure of the earth > structural features > deposited by water, ice, or wind > [noun] > wind-blown drifta1400 wave1789 sand glacier1875 lunette1940 sand shadow1941 a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 9932 Þis castel..quitter es þan snau drif. a1400–50 Alexander (Dublin) 1756 A flaw of fell snaw fallen..fro þe drifte. 1634 T. Herbert Relation Some Yeares Trauaile 91 The sands by the fury of Tempests lies in great drifts. a1644 F. Quarles Solomons Recantation (1645) Sol. iv. 20 Hath Heaven enricht thy paynes with thriving drifts Of mighty Gold? 1698 J. Fryer New Acct. E.-India & Persia 300 Meadows White with Drifts of Snow. 1865 J. G. Whittier Snow-bound 59 A smooth white mound the brush-pile showed, A fenceless drift what once was road. 1889 Daily News 12 Nov. 3/1 The apparent carelessness with which the folds have been drifted together..The drifts are held by clusters of ostrich feathers. 1893 Daily News 10 Mar. 5/8 A drift of lovely lace fell over the large sleeves. c. A large mass of flowering plants (see quot. 1966). ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > reproductive part(s) > flower or part containing reproductive organs > flower or flowering plant > [noun] > mass of drift1908 1908 G. Jekyll Colour in Flower Garden iii. 24 The word ‘drift’ conveniently describes the shape I have in mind, and I commonly use it in speaking of these long-shaped plantings. 1915 C. Mackenzie Guy & Pauline i. 38 Planting a drift of..deep yellow primroses. 1965 Listener 23 Sept. 461/2 All of these bulbs can be planted in drifts of hundreds at a time. 1966 ‘J. M. Berrisford’ Wild Garden viii. 94 Plants and bulbs should be set informally in..‘drift-planting’—that is in ovals of irregular outline rather like cloud formations with one or two outliers a little way off so that they look as if sown by the wind. 9. Floating matter driven by currents of water; a floating log, or mass of wood, etc. so driven. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > refuse or rubbish > [noun] > (wood) floating on water or cast ashore drift1598 driftwood1633 drift-timber1850 the world > movement > progressive motion > moving with current of air or water > movement in or on water > [noun] > moving freely on surface > that which or one who > driven by current drift1598 1598 W. Phillip tr. J. H. van Linschoten Disc. Voy. E. & W. Indies liv. 415/2 Foure miles from the lande you find..many drifts of roots, leaues of Trees, [etc.]. 1627 J. Smith Sea Gram. ix. 43 A Drift is any thing floating in the sea that is of wood. 1667 J. Dryden Annus Mirabilis 1666 clvi. 40 Some Log, perhaps, upon the waters swam An useless drift. 1856 R. W. Emerson Eng. Traits ii. 32 We crept along through the floating drift of boards, logs, and chips. 1897 Daily News 3 May 4/1 They are not beggars..; they are merely human drift—men who live on ‘nuffin’. 10. a. Geology. A term applied (a) to any superficial deposit caused by a current of water or air; also (b) spec. ( the Drift) to Pleistocene deposits of glacial and fluvio-glacial detritus, also known as boulder-clay, and till; diluvium. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > structure of the earth > constituent materials > sediment or alluvium > [noun] > diluvium alluvion1731 diluvium1819 drift1839 1839 R. I. Murchison Silurian Syst. i. xxxvii. 509 Each region of the earth has its own superficial diluvia, produced by separate and distinct action; [for these] the unambiguous word drift is proposed. 1851 D. Wilson Archæol. & Prehistoric Ann. Scotl. i. i. 23 Accumulations of marine and fresh-water shingle and gravel called drift and diluvium. 1865 J. Lubbock Prehist. Times Pref. 1 The Flint Implements of the Drift. 1869 R. B. Smyth Gold Fields Victoria 609 Drift, loose sand or a very loose friable alluvial deposit met with in some places close to the washdirt. 1882 A. Geikie Text-bk. Geol. vi. v. i. §1. 858 This ‘glacial drift’ spreads over the low ground of the glaciated districts. 1892 S. R. Gardiner Student's Hist. Eng. 2 These Palæolithic men of the river drift. b. drift-peat n. a deposit of peat associated with a glacial drift. ΚΠ 1894 J. Geikie Great Ice Age (ed. 3) 308 The drift-peat and timber that underlie the Carse-deposits of the 45 to 50-ft. level. 11. Thesaurus » Categories » a. A set of fishing-nets. b. A large kind of net used in the herring, pilchard, and mackerel fishery, extended by weights at the bottom and floats at the top, and allowed to drift with the tide; also called drift-net n. at Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > net > [noun] > drift- or float-net float-net1647 drift1844 drift-net1848 1844 W. H. Maxwell Wanderings in Highlands & Islands I. App. 330 A drift of nets consists of from sixteen to twenty-six. 1850 H. Miller Scenes & Legends N. Scotl. (ed. 2) xvii. 260 A complete drift of nets. 1854 H. Miller My Schools & Schoolmasters (1858) 440 Not a herring swam so low as the upper baulk of our drift. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fisher > [noun] > collectively drift1486 fisher-train1726 fisher-folk1854 fisher-people1885 1486 Bk. St. Albans F vj b A Drifte of fishers. 12. A series of piles driven in. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > building or providing with specific parts > specific parts built or constructed > [noun] > foundation(s) > pile(s) pilelOE piling1422 spile1513 piloti1674 stilt1697 drift1721 bearing pile?1761 sheet-piling1789 sheeting-pile1837 screw pile1840 sheet-pile1841 sheath-piling1902 1721 J. Perry Acct. Stopping Daggenham Breach 75 The said Drift of dove~tail'd Piles. 1721 J. Perry Acct. Stopping Daggenham Breach 90 A new Drift of Piles on the Thames side. 13. Technical senses. a. A tool used for driving or ramming something (e.g. for driving piles). ΚΠ 1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Drift, betle, or malle, to dryue pyles or stakes, fistuca. b. A steel tool for enlarging or shaping a hole in a piece of metal; a drift-pin. ΚΠ 1849 J. Weale Rudim. Dict. Terms Archit. ii. 160/1 Drift, a piece of hardened steel, notched at the sides and made slightly tapering..used for enlarging a hole in a piece of metal to a particular size by being driven through it. 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Drift-pin, a hand tool of metal driven into a hole to shape it; as the drift which makes the square socket in the watch-key. 1881 W. W. Greener Gun & its Devel. 251 The hole is drifted from round to square by knocking in different-sized drifts. c. ‘A priming-iron used to clear the vent of ordnance from burning particles after each discharge’ (Smyth Sailor's Word-bk.). ΚΠ 1828 J. M. Spearman Brit. Gunner 77 Needles:..Quadrants:..Wooden Drifts. d. Shipbuilding (see quot.1850). ΚΠ 1711 W. Sutherland Ship-builders Assistant 164 Term-pieces; the finishing Pieces, or those which terminate the Drifts. 1850 J. Greenwood Sailor's Sea-bk. 116 Drifts, those parts where the sheer is raised according to the heights of the decks or gangways, and where the rails are cut off and ended by scrolls. 1864 Webster's Amer. Dict. Eng. Lang. Drift, a tool used in driving down compactly the composition contained in a rocket, or like firework. e. Shipbuilding. The difference between the size of a bolt and the hole into which it is driven, or between the circumference of a hoop and the circumference of the mast on which it is to be driven. (Ogilvie.) ΚΠ 1792 Trans. Soc. Arts 10 227 Being a bolt of two drifts, [it] could not be driven out. 1823 G. Crabb Universal Technol. Dict. III. A course or way along which something is driven. 14. a. gen. A track. poetic and rare. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > track, trail, or path > [noun] styc725 patheOE stighta1340 trod-gatea1400 tread14.. pathwaya1450 terry1563 trod1570 trade way1589 track1643 trod-way1660 drifta1711 roadie1768 loke1787 trace1807 trail1807 trackway1818 mud pike1851 dirt track1902 a1711 T. Ken Hymnotheo in Wks. (1721) III. 182 Birds..passing through the airy Drift. b. (See quot. 1811.) ΚΠ 1811 T. Davis Gen. View Agric. Wilts. (new ed.) 268 Drifts, the rows in which underwood is laid when felled. 1915 J. Buchan Thirty-nine Steps vii. 165 I found shelter below an over-hanging rock..where a drift of dead brackens made a tolerable bed. 1927 Forestry 1 33 The normal procedure is to cut the coppice..in drifts 3 feet wide and from 4 to 6 feet apart. The young trees..are planted up the middle of the drifts. 15. Mining, etc. A passage ‘driven’ or excavated horizontally, for working, exploration, ventilation, or draining; esp. one driven in the direction of a mineral vein. See driftway n. 3. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > mine > [noun] > passage > horizontal drift1653 sump1681 heading1811 driftway1843 drive1856 day drift1859 downdrift1868 header1872 1653 E. Manlove Liberties & Customes Lead-mines Derby 159 They may cause [to be] open'd Drifts, and Sumps. ?1677 S. Primatt City & Covntry Purchaser & Builder 5 The conveniency of driving a drift or sough, from the bottom of the hills to the sole of the Rake. 1708 J. C. Compl. Collier 3 in T. Nourse Mistery of Husbandry Discover'd (ed. 3) A Drift or Water-course from the old Pits. 1881 Trans. Amer. Inst. Mining Engineers 1880–1 9 129 s.v. A drift follows the vein, as distinguished from a cross-cut, which intersects it, or a level or gallery, which may do either. 16. A lane or road along which horses or cattle are driven; = driftway n. 1. local. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > [noun] > along which cattle are driven drovelOE drove way1235 driftway1611 drift1686 drove road1740 1686 Evelyn in 15th Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS (1899) App. i. 132 Why it should be made a common drift at all times, does not at all consist with..convenience. 1847–78 J. O. Halliwell Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words 1865 W. White Eastern Eng. II. 79 I went..diagonally, across the wheatfield, and presently struck the ‘drift’, which has the appearance of an old pack-horse road. 1888 H. R. Haggard Col. Quaritch i The broad way that led to it..was a drift or grass lane. 17. South African. [ < col. Dutch drift.] A passage of a river; a ford. ΚΠ 1849 E. E. Napier Excursions Southern Afr. II. 401 The road..crosses two or three ‘drifts’ or fords. 1852 F. Fleming Kaffraria (1854) 46 Where the road crosses a river, what is called a drift is made..by clearing the bed of the river of large stones, and cutting a sloping roadway through the banks on either side. 1856 C. J. Andersson Lake Ngami 320 The passage of the Orange river..at what is called Zendlings Drift, or the missionary ford. IV. Nautical uses relating to a length of rope. 18. Nautical. Length of rope paid out before a fastening is made; length that a tackle will reach from its fixed point; distance so estimated. ΚΠ 1860 H. Stuart Novice's or Young Seaman's Catech. (rev. ed.) 47 Allow a fathom drift..Bend it to the bunt becket, to allow the same drift as the buntlines. 1882 G. S. Nares Seamanship (ed. 6) 120 In ships with great drift between the fore and main yards, the boats are hoisted in..with the launches purchase. Compounds C1. a. General attributive. (a) drift-borer n. (see 15). ΚΠ 1856 Househ. Words 13 544 Miners from Cornwall, drift borers from Wales. drift-cloud n. drift-current n. ΚΠ 1874 F. G. D. Bedford Sailor's Pocket Bk. iv. 83 The Drift current is merely the effect of the wind on the surface of the water. drift-fin n. ΚΠ 1749 Acct. Voy. for Discov. North-west Passage II. 141 To go to the Bottom of the Bay to search for drift Fins [i.e. whales]. drift-rail n. (see 13d). drift-rain n. drift-sand n. ΚΠ 1637 R. Humfrey tr. St. Ambrose Christian Offices ii. 13 The drift sand, pible stones and gravell lying on the shore. drift-wedge n. ΚΠ 1793 J. Smeaton Narr. Edystone Lighthouse (ed. 2) §238 The dormant wedge or that with the point upward, being held in the hand, while the drift wedge or that with its point downward, was driven with a hammer. (b) (In sense 2g.) drift-migrant n. ΚΠ 1952 Scottish Naturalist LXIV. 12 If a drift-migrant could continue on the wing indefinitely it would pass from one weather system to another. 1959 Listener 22 Jan. 160/1 The average drift-migrants that make a landfall are not necessarily lost. drift-migration n. ΚΠ 1960 Brit. Birds LIII. 325 (heading) Autumn ‘drift-migration’ on the English east coast. (c) drift-covered adj. drift-strewn adj. Categories » b. Geology. See 10b. C2. Special combinations. Also drift-ice n., -way comb. form, driftwood n. drift-anchor n. a floating wooden frame or the like, used to keep the ship's head to the wind in a gale or when dismasted (called also drag-, sea-anchor). ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > other equipment of vessel > [noun] > drogue drift-sail1627 stop-water1794 drift-anchor1874 drogue1874 sea-anchor1877 cone-anchor1902 watersail1925 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Drift-anchor. 1881 Times 27 Apr. 6/4 She had lost both her masts, and was riding to a drift anchor. drift-angle n. (a) Naval Architecture the angle of leeway (see leeway n.); (b) Aeronautics (see quots. 1951, 1967). ΚΠ 1882 W. H. White Man. Naval Archit. (ed. 2) xiv. 621 The angle between this tangent and the keel-line, or ‘drift-angle’, (angle de dérive) as it is termed, gradually increases. 1906 E. L. Attwood War-ships (ed. 2) 237 At the point P, where OP is drawn perpendicular to the centre line of the ship, there is no drift angle, as the tangent to the circle through P is the centre line of the ship. 1935 C. G. Burge Compl. Bk. Aviation 264/1 Drift-angle sight, an instrument for determining the drift-angle. 1951 Gloss. Aeronaut. Terms (B.S.I.) iii. 6 Drift angle, the angle, at any instant, between the longitudinal axis of an aircraft and the track. 1967 Gloss. Terms Air-Cushion Vehicles (B.S.I.) 6 Drift angle, the angle, in the horizontal plane, between the longitudinal axis of an ACV and the instantaneous true direction of motion relative to the local meridian. drift-boat n. a boat for fishing with a drift-net. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > fishing vessel > [noun] > drifter drover1584 drivera1643 drift-boat1851 drifter1883 1851 Official Descriptive & Illustr. Catal. Great Exhib. III. 800 Model of..the new Mevagissey drift and fishing boat. 1883 Leisure Hour 697/2 A drift-boat carries from eight to twenty nets. drift-bolt n. (earlier drive-bolt) see quot. ΚΠ 1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. Drift-bolts, commonly made of steel, are used as long punches for driving out other bolts. drift-bottle n. a bottle used for the charting of ocean-currents. ΚΠ 1909 Cent. Dict. Suppl. Drift-bottle. 1912 J. Murray & J. Hjort Depths of Ocean v. 261 In order to study the currents, drift-bottles have..been used, in which are enclosed slips of paper with directions to the finder. 1912 J. Murray & J. Hjort Depths of Ocean v. 262 (caption) Results of Dr. Fulton's drift-bottle experiments in the North Sea. 1966 McGraw-Hill Encycl. Sci. & Technol. (rev. ed.) IX. 252/1 Even slow surface currents have been observed and measured by the drift of debris or drift bottles. drift-fish n. fish taken with a drift-net; so drift-fishery, drift-herring, drift-sprat. ΚΠ 1864 Glasgow Daily Herald 24 Sept. I have sold drift-fish for 12s...both drift herring and trawled herring would be selling for 8s. drift-fisher n. ΚΠ 1864 Glasgow Daily Herald 24 Sept. I was a trawler when trawling was permitted, and a drift fisher as well. drift-indicator n. Aeronautics a device for indicating drift (see sense 2e, above). ΚΠ 1919 H. Shaw Text-bk. Aeronaut. xiii. 169 There are two types of drift indicator, one of which is designed for..indicating leeway over the surface of the ground.., while the other is intended to indicate whether or not the machine is flying head to wind. drift-keel n. = bilge-keel n. ΚΠ 1869 E. J. Reed Shipbuilding ii. 43 Side-keels..[also] known as ‘drift-keels’, ‘auxiliary-keels’, ‘bilge-keels’. drift-mining n. gold-mining carried on by making drifts (sense 15) along the detrital material in the channels of former rivers, now covered by more recent deposits. ΚΠ 1883 Cent. Mag. Jan. 337/1 Quartz and drift mining are not unimportant elements in it. drift-net n. = sense 11b (also attributive). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > net > [noun] > drift- or float-net float-net1647 drift1844 drift-net1848 1848 C. A. Johns Week at Lizard 43 At nightfall the nets are set either across or parallel to the tide and suffered to drift with it, hence they are called ‘drift nets’. 1885 Times 25 May 9 Line and drift-net fishermen. drift-netter n. one who fishes with a drift-net; so . ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fisher > [noun] > using net > using other types of net trammeller1363 trim-tram man1746 halver1812 drift-netter1889 trek-netter1956 1889 Cent. Dict. Drift-netter. 1913 Q. Rev. Apr. 438 Its rapid extension so alarmed the drift-netters that an agitation was started against it. drift-netting n. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > type or method of fishing > [noun] > fishing with net > using other nets rugging1758 halving1792 scringing1825 trammelling1866 splash-netting1901 drift-netting1913 ring-netting1941 1913 Q. Rev. Apr. 438 Drift-netting is carried on by both steamers and sailing vessels. 1963 Times 18 May 11/1 Already there are signs that the prohibition of drift-netting will result in increased river catches. drift oyster n. an Australian oyster, Ostrea subtrigona, supposed to be subject to drift. ΚΠ 1883 E. P. Ramsay Food Fishes N.S. Wales 43 The so-called Drift Oyster of the Sydney Oystermen. drift-piece n. (see quot. 1850 and sense 13d). ΚΠ 1711 W. Sutherland Ship-builders Assistant 75 Term Pieces or Drift Pieces sided. 1850 J. Greenwood Sailor's Sea-bk. 116 Drift-pieces, solid pieces, fitted at the drifts, to form the scrolls. drift-pile n. Canadian a pile of driftwood in a river, etc. ΚΠ 1927 A. P. Woollacott Mackenzie & his Voyageurs 37 Log-jams and drift-piles are numerous and troublesome. 1968 R. M. Patterson Finlay's River 103 They found the river very swift and badly obstructed by driftpiles—dangerous piled-up jams of dead and uprooted trees. drift-pin n. = sense 13b. ΚΠ 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Drift-pin, a hand tool of metal driven into a hole to shape it; as the drift which makes the square socket in the watch-key. drift plate n. Aeronautics = drift-indicator n. ΚΠ 1935 C. G. Burge Compl. Bk. Aviation 475/1 There are many instruments in use to-day for determining this [sc. windage], the oldest being the drift plate..and the most modern..the tail drift sight. drift-punch n. = drift-pin n. ΚΠ 1869 E. J. Reed Shipbuilding x. 198 When the holes are badly punched the workman drives in a steel drift-punch..and the plate is thus forced and torn and the holes enlarged. drift-road n. = driftway n. 1. drift-sail n. (see quot. 1627). ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > equipment of vessel > other equipment of vessel > [noun] > drogue drift-sail1627 stop-water1794 drift-anchor1874 drogue1874 sea-anchor1877 cone-anchor1902 watersail1925 1627 J. Smith Sea Gram. vii. 31 A Drift saile is onely vsed vnder water..to keepe the Ships head right vpon the Sea in a storme, or when a ship driues too fast in a current. 1728 E. Chambers Cycl. Drift-sail, in a Ship, is a Sail us'd under Water. drift sight n. Aeronautics = drift-indicator n. ΚΠ 1935Drift sight [see drift plate n.]. 1940 ‘N. Shute’ Old Captivity vii. 218 The pilot sat hunched at the wheel,..glancing from time to time down through the drift sight. drift-timber n. = driftwood n. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > refuse or rubbish > [noun] > (wood) floating on water or cast ashore drift1598 driftwood1633 drift-timber1850 1850 C. Lyell 2nd Visit U.S. (ed. 2) II. 140 To visit the mouths of the Mississippi, and see the banks of sand, mud, and drift timber, recently formed there. drift-weed n. (a) seaweed drifted on shore by the waves; also figurative; (b) a name for the gulf-weed ( Sargassa baccifera) and tangle ( Laminaria digitata). ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > algae > seaweed > [noun] > patch of drifting seaweed drift-weed1839 weed?1953 1839 C. Darwin in R. Fitzroy & C. Darwin Narr. Surv. Voy. H.M.S. Adventure & Beagle III. xi. 240 The high-water mark of drift weed on a sea-beach. 1906 E. Œ. Somerville & ‘M. Ross’ Some Irish Yesterdays 223 She belonged to the drift-weed of the household. 1909 Daily Chron. 14 June 9/2 These dreadful drift-weeds of the great city. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > wind > [noun] > driving wind drift-winda1625 a1625 W. Shakespeare & J. Fletcher Two Noble Kinsmen (1634) v. v. 100 Waters, That drift windes force to raging. View more context for this quotation Draft additions 1993 drift mine n. any mine reached by a drift (sense 15 above) from the surface. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > mine > [noun] > mine by type of operation stream-work1586 opencast?a1650 lavatory1712 lavadero1717 coffin1778 whole working1842 open cut1848 dry- or wet-diggings1849 river diggings1850 placer digging1851 placer working1867 drift mine1882 strip mine1934 1882 Rep. Precious Metals (U.S. Bureau of Mint) 96 The hydraulic and drift-mines during the last year have produced large sums. 1972 Daily Tel. 12 Feb. 2/3 Their social club's central heating system..had been stoked by coal bought from a local privately-owned drift mine. Draft additions 1993 drift mining n. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > mining > [noun] > other specific types of mining shoading1778 nuggeting1852 placer mining1852 reefing1859 hydraulic mining1873 stripping1874 drift mining1877 gouging1877 hydraulicking1880 open-working1881 strip mining1935 horizon mining1947 roadheading1969 1877 R. W. Raymond Statistics Mines & Mining 44 At Central Hill the drift-mining claims have been steadily worked with varied success. 1889 H. Greene Coal & Coal Mines vii. 82 The day of drift mining in the anthracite regions has gone by. 1976 Nature 29 Apr. 739/3 Geological conditions are sufficiently favourable to allow extraction using ‘drift mining’ techniques, involving production through a single sloping tunnel rather than multiple vertical shafts. Draft additions December 2018 to catch (also get) a person's drift: to understand the general intention or meaning of what someone is saying; (also) to catch (also get) the drift: to follow the direction of a discussion, argument, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > understanding > understand [verb (transitive)] > reach understanding of > words or meaning takec1175 understanda1225 intenda1400 conceive?1526 accept1587 construe1622 to catch a person's drift1821 comprehend1860 to get on to ——1880 read1956 1821 tr. Athenæus in Q. Rev. Oct. 109 The audience know the tale, and catch your drift From a mere hint. 1881 Abstr. Evid. Wharves & Jetties 117 in Proc. Parl. S. Austral. II I don't think you catch the drift of my question. 1948 N. M. Gunn Shadow ii. 86 ‘That's where it lets you down. Or perhaps you don't think so.’ ‘I think I catch your drift,’ said Aunt Phemie. 1949 D. Sinclair Secret Riders Farm i. 12 Quite honestly I don't get the drift of this. 1966 Listener 26 May 765/1 One does not quite catch the drift of their byzantine prose. 1976 D. L. Lewis Public Image Henry Ford xxix. 470 Giving Stacey digs in the ribs to indicate that he caught the drift of the conversation. 1989 T. McMillan Disappearing Acts iii. 56 You ain't gotta jump ship just 'cause you think you might be sinking. You get my drift, girlfriend? 2013 E. Pass ACID lxi. 385 You're going to come down with a stomach upset... A bad one that means you have to stay in bed. Catch my drift? This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online June 2022). driftv. 1. Thesaurus » Categories » a. intransitive. To move as driven or borne along by a current; to float or move along with the stream or wind; = drive v. 9b. b. Of snow, sand, etc.: To collect in heaps driven together by the wind. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > moving with current of air or water > move with current of water or air [verb (intransitive)] drivec1275 sail1377 drift?a1600 voyage1835 fleam1863 ?a1600 Robin Hood 61 Cam dryfting owyr the ley. 1762 W. Falconer Shipwreck ii. 26 Drifting fast on Grecia's rocky strand. 1828 W. Scott Fair Maid of Perth i, in Chron. Canongate 2nd Ser. III. 5 We must let her drift with the current. 1869 J. Phillips Vesuvius iii. 67 Columns of smoke and ashes which drifted to the south-east. 1894 J. T. Fowler in St. Adamnan Vita S. Columbae Introd. 66 Beds of sand, which drift like snow. c. transferred and figurative. To move or pass passively or aimlessly; to be carried involuntarily or without effort in some course or into some condition. Also (colloquial), to go away, get out; to come or go casually; to wander; frequently with adverbs, as to drift around, to drift by, to drift in, to drift out; to drift apart, of a man and a woman: gradually to lose mutual affection, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > specific manner of progressive motion > move progressively in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > without effort drift1822 wift1864 shimmy1923 the mind > emotion > hatred > quarrel or falling out > quarrel or fall at variance [verb (intransitive)] > lose mutual affection to drift apart1903 1822 W. Hazlitt Table-talk (1869) 2nd Ser. i. 8 Drift with the tide of nonsense. 1864 ‘M. Twain’ in Harte & ‘Twain’ Sketches (1926) 122 She can calculate on my drifting around in the course of an hour or so. 1865 R. W. Dale Jewish Temple xi. 121 They..were fast drifting towards apostasy. 1874 ‘M. Twain’ & C. D. Warner Gilded Age I. ix. 119 A week drifted by, and all the while the patient sank lower and lower. 1876 ‘M. Twain’ Adventures Tom Sawyer xxxii. 248 Villagers filed through Judge Thatcher's house..and drifted out raining tears all over the place. 1885 Manch. Examiner 30 Mar. 5/2 Content to let things drift. 1898 M. Deland Old Chester Tales 43 Peter, with a pretty girl on his arm, drifted in out of the windy and rainy darkness. 1903 Red Book July 278/1 Ralph and I had drifted apart years before. 1908 Daily Chron. 28 Sept. 4/7 The drifter drifts to California, and brings up there because..he can drift no further. 1910 P. G. Wodehouse Psmith in City vi. 46 Let us drift aside into this teashop. 1925 W. Deeping Sorrell & Son xxviii. 275 For months he had had a sense of drifting, and his character was not that of a drifter. 1942 R. Chandler High Window (1943) ix. 70 ‘Beat it,’ he said. ‘Drift.’ 1942 R. Chandler High Window (1943) xix. 134 So speak your piece and drift away. 1945 Coast to Coast 1944 3 Early spectators were drifting in. 1954 ‘N. Blake’ Whisper in Gloom i. vi. 83 Well, I'll be drifting. 1958 H. M. Hayward & M. Harari tr. B. Pasternak Dr. Zhivago ix. 255 Tonya and I have never drifted apart and this year of work has brought us even closer together. 2. a. transitive. To drive or carry along, as by a current of water or air; to blow into heaps (snow, sand, etc.). ΘΚΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > moving with current of air or water > move with current of air or water [verb (transitive)] drifta1618 a1618 J. Sylvester Mem. Mortalitie ii. iv Time flits as Winde..Who knowes what ills it every moment drifteth. 1748 Acct. Voy. for Discov. North-west Passage I. 166 In Places where the Snow is drifted by the Wind. 1856 J. A. Froude Hist. Eng. (1858) I. iv. 334 Into civil war the nation had no intention of permitting themselves to be drifted. 1869 E. A. Parker Pract. Hygiene (ed. 3) 296 Can malaria be drifted to the place in any way? b. To allow or cause (a fishing-net or -line) to be borne by the current. Also absol. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > type or method of fishing > [verb (transitive)] > catch fish with net > allow net to drift drift1850 1850 N. Kingsley Diary 21 Apr. (1914) 118 [We] drifted the seine across the river and floated down with the current. 1850 N. Kingsley Diary 21 Apr. (1914) 119 They drifted once more and made up the number of 51 salmon. 1907 Westm. Gaz. 29 Nov. 3/1 By casting or ‘drifting’ the dry-fly on a long line down stream to the fish. 1963 K. Mansfield Anglers' Dict. 51 For bass the best tactics are to anchor up-tide from some buoy, quay or wharf which bass are likely to visit and drift the line down to them. 1971 Angling Times 10 June 3 Colin drifted his peeler crab bait around the rocks on float tackle. c. To drive (cattle or horses) slowly (see quot. 1893). Also with in. U.S. ΚΠ 1893 I. K. Funk et al. Standard Dict. Eng. Lang. I. 555/3 Drift, to drive cattle slowly, letting them feed as they go. 1903 A. Adams Log of Cowboy iv. 51 The Rebel and Blades were following, to drift in what cattle we had held on our left. 1903 A. Adams Log of Cowboy vii. 85 We were drifting them back towards the trail. 1920 J. M. Hunter Trail Drivers of Texas I. 50 [They said] they would drift the horses along with two outfits instead of four. 3. transitive. To cover with drifts (of snow, etc.); also intransitive for reflexive to become covered with drifts. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > cover [verb (transitive)] > by drifting or blowing over overblow?1440 drifta1851 a1851 D. M. Moir Birth Flowers xvii, in Poet. Wks. (1852) When Winter drifts the fields With snow. 1864 J. R. Lowell Fireside Trav. 250 The sides of the road were drifted with heaps of wild hawthorn and honeysuckle. 1892 W. Pike Barren Ground N. Canada 105 Our tracks had drifted up. ΚΠ 1584 J. Carmichael Let. in D. Laing Misc. Wodrow Soc. (1844) 434 To drift time awhile. 1588 A. King tr. P. Canisius Confession in Catech. 3 To drifte to do pœnance for oure sinnes quhil the houre of deathe. 1628 Z. Boyd Last Battell Soule (1629) 237 If thou delay and drift him vntill morrow. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > endeavour > attempt [verb (transitive)] > attempt to effect seekc1000 procurec1300 to stand for ——1531 drift1596 enround1606 1596 W. Warner Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) xii. lxx. 293 Not sooner Dorcas had deuis'd, but Elenor it drifts. 1602 W. Warner Epitome Hist. Eng. in Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) 370 Which Elfrick..drifted the murther of King Edmund. a1618 J. Sylvester Cup Consol. 16 Dark Limbo's Potentate Drifts Man's destruction. 6. Mechanics. To form or enlarge (a hole) with a drift (drift n. 13b). ΚΠ 1869 E. J. Reed Shipbuilding xix. 415 Drifting unfair holes would be considered bad work. 1881 W. W. Greener Gun & its Devel. 251 The hole is drifted from round to square by knocking in different-sized drifts. 7. (Mining.) intransitive. To excavate a drift (see drift n. 15); transitive, to excavate a drift in; = drive v. 15b. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > mining > mine [verb (intransitive)] > dig shaft sump1700 stope1778 drift1849 drive1859 raise1872 society > occupation and work > industry > mining > mine [verb (transitive)] > excavate or sink a shaft or tunnel drive1665 hole1708 to put down1778 shank1821 drift1849 1849 President's Message Congr. II. 505 After drifting on that vein some 30 feet, all signs of copper disappeared. 1849 President's Message Congr. II. 505 He..is now drifting in on a vein on a level with the surface. 1864 in Webster's Amer. Dict. Eng. Lang. 1872 R. W. Raymond Statistics Mines & Mining 179 They have sunk a shaft..over 50 feet, and intend to go to a depth of 200, drifting east and west at 100 feet. 1884 Harper's Mag. Mar. 524/1 It is tunnelled or ‘drifted’ as in one of the hill-side mines. Derivatives ˈdrifted adj. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > moving with current of air or water > [adjective] driving1578 drifted1730 drifting1749 1730 J. Thomson Winter in Seasons 204 Impatient flouncing thro' the drifted heaps. 1778 T. Hutchins Topogr. Descr. Virginia 31 The Channel is obstructed with..Islands, formed by trees and drifted wood. 1867 R. W. Emerson May-day & Other Pieces 8 Struggling through the drifted roads. 1882 Daily Tel. 4 May Sprung landings held with unfair or drifted holes. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online December 2021). > as lemmas(drift, headways, or board brattice) a. (esp.) A partition for the purpose of ventilation in the shaft of a coal-pit ( shaft brattice), or in a drift, or other working of a colliery (drift, headways, or board brattice). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > workplace > places where raw materials are extracted > mine > [noun] > passage > ventilation passages or openings througher1645 thirling1686 air-pit1709 horse-head1747 sollar1778 airway1800 wind-hole1802 bearing door1813 air course1814 downcast shaft1814 upcast shaft (or pit)1816 buze1823 air road1832 raggling1839 thirl1847 brattice1849 intake1849 run1849 trapdoor1849 skailing1850 return1851 wind-road1860 breakthrough1875 wind-way1875 breast1882 cross-heading1883 skail-door1883 U.C.1883 undercast1883 vent1886 furnace-drift1892 1849 G. C. Greenwell Gloss. Terms Coal Trade Northumberland & Durham 11 Shaft or main brattice is usually made of 3-inch Memel plank..Common brattice is made of ½-inch American deal..It is nailed to props set for the purpose (called brattice props). 1860 Times 10 Dec. 10/2 Where only one shaft is sunk..a downcast and an upcast are created by running an airtight partition, or ‘brattice’ to the bottom. 1883 Standard 23 Nov. 3/7 Gas still showed..on both sides of the brattice. < n.a1400v.1584 as lemmas |
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