单词 | grab |
释义 | grabn.1 Anglo-Indian. A large coasting-vessel, drawing very little water, built with a prow and usually two-masted, used in the East (see quots. 1763, 1839). ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessel propelled by sail > [noun] > vessel with specific number of masts > types of vessel with two masts > other two-masted vessels dogger1338 hooker1641 dogger-boat1646 bilander1656 saic1667 grab1680 frigatoon1721 sandal1753 koff1794 sumack1805 quay punt1876 sinagot1927 1680 R. Morden Geogr. Rectified (1685) 405 The desperate attacks made..by 1500 of his men in three Ships and four Grabs. 1698 J. Fryer New Acct. E.-India & Persia 174 Admiral of his Fleet of Grobs and Boats. 1763 R. Orme Hist. Mil. Trans. Brit. Nation I. 401 The grabs have rarely more than two masts, although some have three;..they are built to draw very little water, being very broad in proportion to their length, narrowing however from the middle to the end, where instead of bows they have a prow. 1773 E. Ives Voy. India 43 One Grab of 18 guns, and several other vessels. 1823 R. Heber Jrnl. 7 Oct. in Narr. Journey Upper Provinces India (1828) I. i. 9 Their grabs, which still have an elongated bow,..are described as often very fine vessels. 1839 H. Malcom Trav. II. 357 Gloss., Grab, a square-rigged Arab coasting vessel, having a very projecting stem, and no bowsprit. It has two masts. 1878 E. J. Trelawny Rec. Shelley, Byron (1887) 84 A Persian dhow, an Arab grab, or a Chinese junk. Compounds C1. General attributive. grab-brig n. ΚΠ 1831 E. J. Trelawny Adventures Younger Son I. 177 De Ruyter now took me on board of an Arab grab brig. grab-ketch n. ΚΠ 1790 R. Beatson Naval & Mil. Mem. II. 40 His fleet..consisted of eight grab-ketches [etc.]. grab-snow n. ΚΠ 1806 Naval Chron. 15 470 The Grab Snow Generous Friends,..burthen about two hundred tons. grab-vessel n. ΚΠ 1801 Asiatic Ann. Reg. 1800 Chron. 22/2 They perceived a grab vessel at anchor. C2. grab-service n. (see quot. 1867). ΚΠ 1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. Grab service, country vessels first employed by the Bombay government against the pirates; afterwards erected into the Bombay Marine. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online March 2022). grabn.2 1. a. A quick sudden clutch, grasp, seizure, or attempt to seize. Also figurative (cf. sense 1b); to have the grab on (slang): to have great advantage of. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > seizing > [noun] nomea1300 arrestc1386 seizingc1400 rugging1507 rapping1541 grasping1546 seizement1581 expropriation1626 possessionc1693 grabbing1788 grab1835 the world > movement > absence of movement > hold or holding > [noun] > laying hold or seizing > suddenly or eagerly > sudden or violent grasp snatch1587 click1824 clutch1833 grab1835 1835 T. C. Haliburton Clockmaker 1st Ser. viii He makes a grab at me, and I shuts the door right to on his wrist. 1839 F. Marryat Diary in Amer. II. 111 I rose gently with both hands ready for a grab. 1857 Trans. Illinois State Agric. Soc. 1856–7 2 287 Hotel-keepers would not act as if it was the last and only grab. 1859 T. De Quincey Incognito (rev. ed.) in Select. Grave & Gay XI. 3 The chairman, unable to control his impatience, made a grab at it. 1873 J. H. Beadle Undeveloped West xxi. 429 The railroads, of course, get the first grab, their land is already secured. b. The action or practice of grabbing. game of grab (perhaps cf. sense 5 and grab-game n. at Compounds 2), policy of grab: in recent journalistic use often applied opprobriously to rapacious proceedings in political or commercial affairs. grab and keep: commercial rapacity and selfishness. on the grab: intent on gain. up for grabs: open to offer; easily obtainable (slang (chiefly U.S.)). ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > seizing > [noun] > unscrupulous or rapacious scamblingc1538 whale1606 game of grab1883 the mind > possession > acquisition > acquisition or loss [phrase] > easily obtainable up for grabs1945 rent-a-crowd1961 the mind > possession > giving > offer or action of offering > [adjective] > offered > open to offer up for grabs1945 1883 Ld. Wemyss in St. James's Gaz. 16 July They..are playing a game of ‘grab’ for the farmer's vote. 1884 Pall Mall Gaz. 13 Sept. 3/1 The fatal inauguration of the policy of grab by Lord Beaconsfield in 1878. 1888 Daily News 12 Dec. 4/8 Part of a policy called by fine people annexation and by common people grab. 1893 W. Besant Ivory Gate 236 The selfishness of mankind as illustrated by the universal game of Grab. 1897 Westm. Gaz. 24 Nov. 1/3 The newly invented game of ‘grab’ in Africa. 1905 ‘G. Thorne’ Lost Cause ii They've nothing to get by it..and that flatters 'em because they're always on the grab in every other way. 1905 Daily Chron. 9 May 3/1 The grab-and-keep of towns. 1945 L. Shelly Hepcats Jive Talk Dict. 35 Up for grabs, easy to make gal. 1954 L. V. Berrey & M. Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Slang (ed. 2) §356/7 Up for grabs, easy to pick up. 1967 Boston Globe 5 Apr. 51/5 Right now every position is up for grabs. Every player is going to get a shot. 1968 Globe & Mail (Toronto) 3 Feb. B3/3 At the time that General Bakeries made its bid, Mr. Conrad said the Ogilvie companies appeared to be ‘up for grabs’. 1971 Financial Mail (Johannesburg) 26 Feb. 675/2 So the hotel reservations set-up looks up for grabs. 2. The thing grabbed. Scottish. ΚΠ 1777 M. Hunter Jrnl. (1894) 27 Grab was a favourite expression among the Light Infantry, and meant any plunder taken by force. 1824 J. Mactaggart Sc. Gallovidian Encycl. Grabs, little prizes. 1825 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. Suppl. Grab,..the number of objects thus seized. 3. One who grabs: a. A body-snatcher, resurrectionist. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > thief > bodysnatcher > [noun] resurrectionist1777 resurrection man1781 resurrection woman1815 body snatcher1819 resurrection cove1819 resurrectioner1822 resurrection jarvey1825 grab1831 snatcher1831 body lifter1832 all-night man1861 resurrector1861 1831 S. Warren in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. June 961/2 Sir ——'s dressers, and myself, with an experienced ‘grab’, that is to say, a professional resurrectionist—were to set off from the Borough. b. A catchpoll, bumbailiff, policeman. Perhaps Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > one who administers justice > an officer of the court > [noun] > official who executes orders of court > bailiff beadlec1000 ridemanlOE cacherela1325 outrider1332 bailiff1377 catchpolea1382 bailiec1386 officer?1387 sheriff's manc1400 attacher1440 messenger1482 tipped staffc1500 servitor1527 bailie-errant1528 processar1534 bum-bailiff1560 tipstaff1570 nut-hook1600 saffo1607 servera1612 bailiff-errant1612 bum-bailey1615 process servera1616 buckle-bosom1622 bumbee1653 exploiter1653 moar1656 bum1659 bummer1675 bumbail1696 bulldog1699 sheriff's officer1703 bum-trap1749 bound-bailiff1768 shelly-coata1774 body snatcher1778 lurcher1785 fool-finder1796 messenger1801 bugaboo1809 borough-bailiff1812 sheriff mair1812 speciality1815 grab1823 legalist1835 candy man1863 writter1882 sheriff1928 1823 Spirit of Public Jrnls. (1824) 178 When bailiffs and grabs hunt us up in the East. 1849 A. R. Smith Pottleton Legacy xv. 123 Do you want to..have the grabs point at us as swindlers? 1958 Amer. Speech 33 225 Less frequently used among nonmusicians..are..shamus, fuzz, grab (all meaning policeman). c. gen. ΚΠ 1919 B. Booth in H. Begbie Life Wm. Booth (1920) ii. 24 My father was a Grab, a Get. 4. A mechanical device or implement for clutching or gripping objects (see quots.). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > clutching or gripping equipment > [noun] grapple1571 clamp1688 grip1857 gripper1857 grab1865 grapnel1875 1865 A. M. Eaton Diary 14 Oct. in W. Pennsylvania Hist. Mag. (1935) 18 205 We saw a ‘grab’ an instrument designed to get out tools stuck in any well. 1875 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Grab,..the term is especially applied to devices for withdrawing pipes, drills, reamers, etc., from artesian, oil, and other wells. 1881 Proc. Instit. Civil Engineers 65 312 A modification of the bucket [dredger]..with strong curved steel arms..to which the makers have given the name of ‘grab’. 1881 Standard 16 Nov. 2/5 The accident was caused by the plate having slipped from the ‘grab’ by which it was being lifted. 1893 Times 10 July 13/6 Grain cargoes..discharged..by the use of hydraulic cranes and tubs or Priestman's grabs. 1897 Daily News 10 Sept. 8/5 Hydraulic cranes drop down their ‘grabs’ into the loose grain in the hold of the vessel like a huge pair of jaws. They come up the next instant with a mouthful of about three-quarters of a ton, and spit it out into a hopper. 1955 Times 19 May 7/6 Cranes and mechanical grabs heave up loads of what the council call ‘reluctant London clay’. 5. a. A children's card game, in which when two or more cards of equal value are on the table together the player who is quickest to recognize and ‘grab’ them adds them to his own hand. Cf. also animal n. Compounds 1. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > children's or simple games > [noun] snap snorum1622 beggar-my-neighbour1734 snip-snap-snorum1755 old maid1831 pounce commerce1847 muggins1855 happy families1861 author1863 snap1881 strip-jack-naked1881 spoof1884 animal grab1894 grab1900 donkey1920 1900 in N.E.D. 1941 H. G. Wells You can't be too Careful ii. i. 46 They had a pack of real cards..and gambled with them at Beat your Neighbour out of doors and Grab. b. Chess. Applied to a particular class of problems: in full grab theme. (See quot. 19131.) ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > [noun] > problems jeopardyc1369 problem1817 Indian problem1846 mover1868 Indian1878 retractive problem1890 waiting problem1891 retractor1893 help-mate1897 sui1897 miniature1903 waiter1906 grab theme1909 fairy chess1914 King's (or Queen's) Indian1931 1909 A. C. White Knights & Bishops p. iii. 1913 A. C. White Sam Loyd 357 The Grab Theme... The theme includes, in its broadest sense, all problems where a Black piece is captured on two or more squares... In its narrower sense it is limited to the problems where a particular Black piece is captured on two or more squares by a single White piece or by two White pieces of the same kind. 1913 A. C. White Sam Loyd 359 The Grab by the concerted action of the two White Knights is extremely pretty. 1943 B. Harley Mate in Three Moves 52 The grab theme..is essentially a brutal and monotonous business. 1963 M. Lipton et al. Chess Probl. 259 A doubling of the grab theme, in which a black unit is captured on a number of different squares, leading to zugzwang. Compounds C1. General attributive. grab-crane n. ΚΠ 1895 Daily News 15 Apr. 8/2 [For sale by auction,] 30 steam, hand, and grab cranes. grab-digger n. ΚΠ 1936 Oxoniensia 1 81 Without their ready co-operation and their keenness to save everything possible from the very teeth of their ‘grab’-digger, we should not have been able to record and preserve such a wealth of detail in advance of the gravel-digging. grab dredger n. ΚΠ 1909 Man. Seamanship (H.M.S.O.) II. xiii. 224 In hard ground it would be necessary to loosen the earth..or dig a hole with a grab dredger. grab-iron n. grab-line n. grab-machine n. ΚΠ 1887 Pall Mall Gaz. 22 Sept. 11/1 Priestman's grab machine is now set to work to excavate the earth from the centre of the caisson. C2. grab-bag n. U.S. at fancy fairs a bag containing various articles, into which one may dip on payment of a certain sum; also figurative. ΚΠ 1855 ‘Q. K. P. Doesticks’ Doesticks, what he Says xvi. 135 [A] young woman wanted me to invest in the ‘grab bag’; [I] gave half a dollar, and fished in. 1879 N.Y. Tribune 23 Sept. It is a grab-bag from which every disappointed politician hopes to draw a prize. 1886 Harper's Mag. Jan. 237 The woodman's axe now resounded with the busy notes of preparation for a dive into nature's great grab-bag. 1960 20th Cent. May 460 Sociology is the great intellectual grab-bag of our times. 1967 Canadian Ann. Rev. 1966 6 It met strong resistance from those who supported the traditional formula of a grab-bag of promises. 1967 C. O. Skinner Madame Sarah (new ed.) xii. 269 Sarah would hold out a grab bag from which each child drew a number. grab bar n. a bar fitted as a handhold, esp. one grasped for stabilization or support. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > support > [noun] > that which supports > (a) handhold stayc1515 holdfast1566 hand rest1819 handlebar1844 handhold1845 grasp-hold1851 grab bar1959 1959 Home Safety Rev. Winter 21/2 Install grab bars next to bathtub and in showers. 1967 Gloss. Caravan Terms (B.S.I.) 2 Grab bars, grab handles, bars or handles fitted to the outside of the bodywork to assist in manhandling the caravan. 1970 Globe & Mail (Toronto) 28 Sept. 10/2 (advt.) Bathroom safety aids..grab bars and safety rails. 1985 New Age Winter 22/2 Corridors, passages and bathrooms should have hand-rails; and one or two ‘grab bars’ might be worth considering for the bedroom. grab bucket n. = bucket n.1 3b. ΚΠ 1885 Marine Engin. 1 Aug. 139/2 (heading) Recent applications for patents..7333 C. W. Hunt. Dredging or grab buckets. grab-coup n. = grab-game n. (a). ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > defrauding or swindling > [noun] > scheme > specific grab-coup1823 grab-game1846 prop game1966 1823 ‘J. Bee’ Slang Grab-coup, modern practice of gambling, adopted by the losers, thus the person cheated or done, takes his opportunity, makes a dash at the depository of money, or such as may be down for the play and grabs as much as possible, pockets the proceeds, and fights his way out of the house. grab-game n. (a) (see quot. 1859); (b) the policy of ‘grabbing’ territories, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > defrauding or swindling > [noun] > scheme > specific grab-coup1823 grab-game1846 prop game1966 1846 R. B. Sage Scenes Rocky Mts. xxxii. 282 Provided you won't attempt the grab game on us. 1859 J. R. Bartlett Dict. Americanisms (ed. 2) Grab Game, a mode of swindling or rather stealing, practised by sharpers..Bets are made..when a dispute is purposely planned, in the midst of which one of the confederates seizes or ‘grabs’ the money at stake and runs off. The term is also used in a more general sense to signify stealing and making off with the booty. 1864 R. B. Kimball Was he Successful? ix. 116 A bold, daring, unscrupulous man, who, in the language of his acquaintances, practised the grab-game. 1895 Forum (N.Y.) May 265 This eventuated in preventing the grab-game of France. grab handle n. a handle fitted in a motor car to assist passengers entering or alighting, or to steady them when the car is moving. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > parts and equipment of motor vehicles > [noun] > handle to steady passengers grab handle1959 1959 Observer 1 Mar. 21/6 The..walnut screen rail with grab handle. 1961 Times 28 Mar. 4/6 Large ‘grab’ handles of a flexible material fitted to the roof above each of the four doors are useful when passengers are entering or leaving. 1970 Motoring Which? Apr. 50/1 Armrests were only fair, but the passenger had a good grab handle. grab-hook n. any hook for grabbing, spec. (see quot. a1887); (in plural) Nautical slang fingers. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > other fishing equipment > [noun] > prongs or hooks for landing fish grab-hook1608 gaff1656 weir-hook1688 pew1765 click-hookc1810 picaroon1837 gaff-hook1844 pew-gaffa1884 fish-gaff1887 snigger1901 the world > life > the body > external parts of body > limb > digit > finger > [noun] fingerOE talons1594 nimblesa1637 the ten stealers1655 Welsh comb1788 forks1819 hooks1829 fingerlet1836 bread hook1845 dactyl1889 grab-hook1946 1608 E. Topsell Hist. Serpents 170 Taking vppe theyr Nettes, at one place they did hang so fast as without breaking they could not pull them out of the water, wher fore they sette theyr Grabbe-hookes vnto them to loose them. a1887 R. Jefferies Field & Hedgerow (1889) 179 The grapnel kept at every village draw-well is called the grab-hook. 1889 Cent. Dict. Grab-hook, in angling, a hook made by fixing four large fish-hooks in a piece of lead. 1905 Terms Forestry & Logging (Bull. U.S. Dept. Agric., Bureau Forestry, No. 61) 38 Grab hook, a hook having a narrow throat, adapted to grasp any link of a chain. 1946 J. Irving Royal Navalese 86 Grabhooks, fingers. grab-racket n. U.S. a disorderly scramble, in which each person ‘grabs’ what he can. ΚΠ 1892 R. L. Stevenson & L. Osbourne Wrecker xiv. 219 Now boss!..is this to be run shipshape? or is it a Dutch grab-racket? grab rail n. ΚΠ 1963 Times 21 May 5/6 Sensible points include a padded grab~rail. grab strap n. a rail or strap inside a motor vehicle for standing passengers to hold. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > public service vehicle > [noun] > bus or tram with specific number of decks > rail or strap for standing passengers to hold strap1842 grab strap1955 1955 E. K. Wenlock Kitchin's Road Transport Law (ed. 10) 94 A clear height of 5 ft 10 in excluding any grab rail or strap shall extend over all space intended for use by standing passengers. Draft additions July 2011 A still image obtained from a film or video sequence, esp. by digital means; an instance of obtaining such an image. Also: = grabber n. Additions. Usually with modifying word.frame grab, screen grab, video grab: see the first element. ΚΠ 1975 U.S. Patent 3,875,329 8 The frame grab logic..contains a conventional logic comparator. 1985 Broadcasting (Nexis) 8 Apr. 49 A ‘real-time grab’, which takes a single frame of video from a VTR with proper NTSC mapping components. 1996 Mini-Micro-Systems May 1 (heading) Image grab and display for multimedia computer. 2008 A. Boyd et al. Broadcast Journalism (ed. 6) xxviii. 331 Most TV stations will have a stock of freeze frames or grabs of leading politicians. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online March 2022). grabv. 1. transitive. To grasp or seize suddenly and eagerly; hence, to appropriate to oneself in a rapacious or unscrupulous manner. to grab hold of (cf. hold n.1 2). ΘΚΠ the world > movement > absence of movement > hold or holding > hold [verb (transitive)] > lay hold of or grasp > quickly or suddenly cleeka1400 nipa1500 grab1589 snatch1590 snap1688 scrab1890 the mind > possession > taking > seizing > seize [verb (transitive)] > unscrupulously or rapaciously wipec1000 scamble1599 ruffle1608 scramble1647 grab1801 1589 J. Rider Bibliotheca Scholastica 674 To Grabbe, or grabble, vide to graple. 1801 A. Wilson Let. 7 Aug. in Poems & Lit. Prose (1876) I. 86 Old..witches..butter from churns are eternally grabbing. 1820 J. W. Croker in S. Smiles Publisher & Friends (1891) II. xxiii. 86 I will go to the Museum and grab them, as my betters have done before me. 1873 G. C. Davies Mountain, Meadow & Mere xviii. 164 He grabbed it hard and fast. 1878 R. Browning Poets Croisic cvii How did it happen that gross Humbug grabbed Thy weapons? 1881 Macmillan's Mag. 45 39 Little dark-brown creatures..armed each with four needle-like talons, ready to grab cruelly the hand put within reach. 1888 Times (Weekly ed.) 21 Dec. 16/3 You had done what is called ‘grab’ that land. 1894 Forum (N.Y.) Dec. 401 John Bull is not habitually slow to run up his flag on any available spot he may safely grab. 1894 A. Conan Doyle Mem. Sherlock Holmes 123 The fellows evidently grabbed hold of anything they could get. 1900 A. E. Bayly & W. Briscoe Chrons. Country Cricket Club (1908) x. 111 I was walking outside the cricket grounds and you grabbed hold of me. 2. a. To ‘collar’, capture, or arrest (a person). ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > general proceedings > arrest > [verb (transitive)] at-holda1230 attacha1325 resta1325 takec1330 arrest1393 restay?a1400 tachec1400 seisinc1425 to take upa1438 stowc1450 seize1471 to lay (also set, clap, etc.) (a person) by the heels?1515 deprehend1532 apprehend1548 nipa1566 upsnatcha1566 finger1572 to make stay of1572 embarge1585 cap1590 reprehend1598 prehenda1605 embar1647 nap1665 nab1686 bone1699 roast1699 do1784 touch1785 pinch1789 to pull up1799 grab1800 nick1806 pull1811 hobble1819 nail1823 nipper1823 bag1824 lag1847 tap1859 snaffle1860 to put the collar on1865 copper1872 to take in1878 lumber1882 to pick up1887 to pull in1893 lift1923 drag1924 to knock off1926 to put the sleeve on1930 bust1940 pop1960 vamp1970 1800 Sporting Mag. 16 26 Agreed to grab about a dozen old acquaintances. 1811 Lexicon Balatronicum (at cited word) The pigs grabbed the kiddey for a crack. 1829 Ann. Reg. 117 He is sure Benning did not grab, or endeavour to collar Wickliffe. a1845 R. H. Barham Brothers of Birchington in Ingoldsby Legends (1847) 3rd Ser. 266 My bailiff grabb'd Dick when he should have nabb'd Bob. 1894 H. Nisbet Bush Girl's Romance 115 A very dangerous young criminal..whom I reckon we won't be able to grab in a hurry. b. To arrest the attention of (a person); to make an impression on. slang. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > attention > attracting attention > engage the attention [verb (transitive)] exercisea1538 entertainc1540 replenish1548 rouse1583 catcha1586 amuse1586 detainc1595 attract1599 grope1602 concerna1616 take1634 stay1639 engage1642 meet1645 nudge1675 strike1697 hitcha1764 seize1772 interest1780 acuminate1806 arrest1835 grip1891 intrigue1894 grab1966 work1969 1966 Gramophone Popular Record Catal. Dec. (Artist section) 190/2 Sinatra, Nancy... How Does That Grab You? Not the lovin' kind; Shadow of your smile;..How does that grab you darlin'?; Bang, bang. 1968 Canadian Mag. 15 June 27/2 D'you think that will grab them? 1970 Daily Tel. 18 Sept. (Colour Suppl.) 46/4 I suppose, as my daughter puts it, ‘life is whatever grabs you’. 1971 Post (S. Afr.) 9 May (Cape ed.) 9/5 Elton John is big but if his music doesn't grab you then it just doesn't grab you. 3. a. intransitive. To make a grab or snatch at (U.S. for). ΘΚΠ the world > movement > absence of movement > hold or holding > hold [verb (transitive)] > lay hold of or grasp > grasp at or clutch at snatch1530 reach1542 to catch at ——1578 snap1673 to grasp at1677 clutch1834 grabble1837 seize1848 grab1852 1852 H. B. Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin (U.K. ed.) xii. 107 A stick of candy, which he eagerly grabbed at. 1867 A. Trollope Last Chron. Barset I. xxxvii. 325 She stretched out her hand to grab at the ledger. 1885 N.Y. Weekly Sun 13 May 5/1 He made a jump for the knife and Short grabs for it at the same time. b. Of the brakes of a motor vehicle: to act harshly or jerkily. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > vehicles according to means of motion > vehicle moving on wheels > move on wheels [verb (intransitive)] > specific action of brakes grab1919 fade1940 1919 E. S. Fraser & R. B. Jones Motor Vehicles xxxi. 328 If the brakes grab or screech a few drops of castor oil..may stop the trouble. 1962 Which? July (Suppl.) 90/1 The brakes ‘grabbed’ very badly, because the friction pad assemblies on the front wheels had moved in the caliper units. 4. slang. to grab on: to get along, live. ΘΚΠ the world > life > source or principle of life > [verb (intransitive)] liveeOE aliveeOE ylivec950 won971 goc1225 movea1325 breathea1382 reigna1400 to pass on earth (also mould)c1400 to draw (one's) breath?1570 exist1578 respire1619 to tread clay, this earth, shoe leather1789 to grab on1861 to store the kin1866 1861 H. Mayhew London Labour (new ed.) III. 139/1 Between the two I do manage to grab on somehow. Compounds grab-all n. (a) one who grabs everything, a rapacious person; (b) a bag to carry odds and ends (Farmer Slang 1893). ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > seizing > [noun] > unscrupulous or rapacious > one who grab-all1872 1872 Sunday Times 18 Aug. 2/3 The mean and contemptible grab-alls of that government which professes to study the people's interest. 1895 S. R. Crockett Men of Moss-hags xxiii. 163 Robert Grier of Lag, who was a very grab-all among them. Derivatives grabbed adj. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > seizing > [adjective] > seized yfongc1000 seized1837 grabbed1891 1891 Star 5 Nov. 4/1 The grabbed rights of way mentioned recently. ˈgrabbing n. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > seizing > [noun] nomea1300 arrestc1386 seizingc1400 rugging1507 rapping1541 grasping1546 seizement1581 expropriation1626 possessionc1693 grabbing1788 grab1835 the world > movement > absence of movement > hold or holding > [noun] > laying hold or seizing > suddenly or eagerly snatchery?1553 grabbing1788 1788 W. Eden in G. Rose Diaries (1860) I. 74 There remained merely the finding and grabbing some respectable office for life. 1895 Daily News 25 Oct. 6/3 The Chitral principality is now within the English sphere, to borrow a term which international diplomacy owes to the grabbing-up of Africa. 1919 E. S. Fraser & R. B. Jones Motor Vehicles xxii. 235 Cone clutches are usually faced with leather..the leather becomes hard and dry resulting in ‘grabbing’. 1959 Motor Man. (ed. 36) iv. 71 Quite elaborate springing arrangements may be built into the clutch disc to avoid ‘grabbing’ when the friction surfaces are just on the point of gripping. Draft additions July 2011 transitive. To obtain (an individual frame or still image) from a film or video sequence; to select (a chosen portion) of video or audio data, typically in digital form. Cf. grab n.2 Additions, grabber n. Additions. ΚΠ 1972 N.Y. Times 5 Mar. iii. 9/5 Each Lithocon tube will grab the TV frame derived from the microfilm image selected by the computer every thirtieth of a second. 1985 Acorn User Feb. 153/2 Pages from other viewdata systems may be grabbed and added to the main file. 1997 Web Aug. 7 (advt.) Just use the video capture card, which can capture video at up to 30 frames per second, to grab moving images directly from those sources. 2009 B. Cudnik Lunar Meteoroid Impacts 147 The usefulness of a frame grabber is that one can select and ‘grab’ the frames of choice if one notices a lunar impact candidate event. One can save these frames separately and later use them to analyze the event. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11680n.21608v.1589 |
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