单词 | steam |
释义 | steamn. 1. a. A vapour or fume given out by a substance when heated or burned.In this and following senses the word was frequently used in the plural down to c1800. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > gas > [noun] > fumes or vapour > a vapour steamc1000 vapour1382 exhalation1393 fumosity1477 suffumigation1567 fluxion1603 aspiration1635 halitus1661 suffumige1666 emanation1832 the world > matter > gas > [noun] > fumes or vapour > types of fume or vapour > fumes from heated or burnt substance breathOE steamc1000 c1000 Sax. Leechd. II. 284 Man pintreow bærne to gledum..and onfo ðam steme. 1660 R. Boyle New Exper. Physico-mechanicall xi. 80 The stifling steams of the Coals. 1668 N. Culpeper & A. Cole tr. T. Bartholin Anat. (new ed.) ii. ix. 119 The steam of newly whited Walls. 1670 J. Beale in Philos. Trans. 1669 (Royal Soc.) 4 1113 The steams of the Mercury in some hot Summer. 1705 F. Fuller Medicina Gymnastica 170 The Steam of their inflammable Parts is of Use. 1794 J. MacPhail Treat. Culture Cucumber 92 The heat of the cucumber bed began to rise; a little air was given to it to let the steam pass off. 1845 G. Mills Treat. Cucumber (ed. 2) 29 The steam which arose from the well~prepared manure of the bed. 1859 Ld. Tennyson Enid in Idylls of King 77 And all the hall was dim with steam of flesh. b. spec. An odorous exhalation or fume. ΚΠ OE Panther 45 Æfter þære stefne stenc ut cymeð of þam wongstede, wynsumra steam, swettra ond swiþra swæcca gehwylcum. 1589 R. Greene Menaphon sig. K3v Thy breath is like the steeme of apple pies. 1608 T. Middleton Your Fiue Gallants sig. H2 A fellow of seuerall sents and Steames. 1631 B. Jonson Divell is Asse v. vii. 2 in Wks. II Fough ! what a steeme of brimstone Is here? 1644 C. Jessop Angel Church of Ephesus 27 I will not cause the Reader to stop his nose at those putrid steemes which would arise if that puddle were stirred. 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost xi. 442 His Offring soon propitious Fire from Heav'n Consum'd with nimble glance, and grateful steame . View more context for this quotation 1782 W. Cowper Conversation in Poems 225 [Tobacco] Thy thirst-creating steams. 1827 T. Hamilton Youth & Manhood Cyril Thornton I. xii. 178 The savoury steams of roast and stew..pervaded the mansion. 1835 N. P. Willis Pencillings I. 61 The steams of sulphur, as we approached the summit, were all but intolerable. a. A vapour or exhalation produced as an ‘excrement’ of the body, e.g. hot breath, perspiration, the infectious effluvium of a disease. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > organs of excretion > excretions > [noun] > emanations steamc1000 c1000 Ælfric Homilies I. 86 Him stod stincende steam of ðam muðe. 1303 R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne 2526 Þe steme stode oute of hys mouþ brennand. c1330 R. Mannyng Chron. Wace (Rolls) 1818 Oft aboute ilk oþer þrew, þe stem stod vp, so þey blew. c1400 Song Roland 836 Kene knyghtis cry and crossen helmes,..out flow the stemes. 1593 W. Shakespeare Venus & Adonis sig. Bij Panting he lies, and breatheth in her face. She feedeth on the steame, as on a pray. View more context for this quotation 1670 J. Covel Diary in J. T. Bent Early Voy. Levant (1893) 116 These [insects] never stir out of their holes and lurking-places till the steam and perspiration of your bodyes invite them. 1722 D. Defoe Jrnl. Plague Year 140 The Effluvia or Infectious Steams of Bodies infected. 1734 J. Swift Strephon & Cloe in Beautiful Young Nymph 8 No Humours gross, or frowzy Steams,..Could from her taintless Body flow. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > digestive disorders > [noun] > flatulence > vapour steamc1000 fumosityc1386 fumec1400 vapours1422 crudity1541 gas1759 c1000 Sax. Leechd. II. 226 Fleo þa mettas þa þe him dylsta & forbærnunga & stiem on Innan wyrcen. 1602 J. Marston Antonios Reuenge v. iii. sig. I3v Pieros lips reake steame of wine. 1605 Trag. End Sir J. Fites (1860) 12 She avoyded further perill of death, which hee in his steame of wine, had bin likely to have offered unto her. c. Close and hot air arising from persons crowded together. archaic. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > gas > [noun] > fumes or vapour > types of fume or vapour > arising from people crowded together steam1609 1609 P. Holland tr. Ammianus Marcellinus Rom. Hist. xxix. ii. 352 When as neither the common goales..nor privat mens houses could now hold the number of them that were committed to ward, as being thronged and thrust close together with a hot steame among them. 1625 F. Bacon Ess. (new ed.) 225 Some Sweet Odours, suddenly comming forth, without any drops falling, are, in such a Company, as there is Steame and Heate, Things of great Pleasure; & Refreshment. 1793 T. Beddoes Observ. Nature & Cure Calculus 141 The steams abounding in [a crowded] room..may be injurious to consumptive persons. 1850 Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam lxxxvii. 129 The dust and din and steam of town. View more context for this quotation ΚΠ 1602 J. Marston Antonios Reuenge iii. v. sig. F4v Looke how I smoake in blood, reeking the steame Of foming vengeance. 1672 J. Owen Disc. Evangelical Love i. 19 For the most part, they [the outcries on account of schism] are nothing but the steam of Interest and Party. 1677 R. Gilpin Dæmonol. Sacra i. vii. 54 Sometimes he reaps a large Harvest where he had sowen little, and from one Temptation, not only wounds the soul of him that committed it, but endevours to diffuse the Venom and Poysonous Steam of it to the Infection of others. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > light > [noun] > ray or beam beamc885 rowc1225 stringc1275 steamc1300 light beama1398 shafta1400 rayc1400 strakec1400 rade?a1563 gleed1566 radiation1570 shine1581 rayon1591 stralla1618 radius1620 rule1637 irradiation1643 track1693 emanation1700 spoke1849 spearc1850 slant1856 sword1866 secondary1921 the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > burning > fire or flame > [noun] > flame or blaze > a flame steamc1300 flamea1340 open flame1861 c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) 591 Of hise mouth it stod a stem, Als it were a sunnebem. c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 473/2 Steem, or lowe of fyre, flamma. 4. An exhalation or watery vapour rising from the earth or sea. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > cloud > mist > [noun] misteOE roke1292 vapourc1386 nyle1481 stove1513 fumec1550 rouka1586 misting1604 steam1612 dampa1616 petty-fog1641 smoke1648 brume1694 muga1728 ure1818 nebule1869 nebula1894 moist1903 M1904 clag1940 1612 M. Drayton Poly-olbion vii. 103 It is your foggy steame The powerfull Sunne exhales. 1695 J. Woodward Ess. Nat. Hist. Earth 209 The Steams and Damps of Mines are detrimental to Health. 1748 B. Robins & R. Walter Voy. round World by Anson ii. v. 183 The equability and duration of the tropical heat contribute to impregnate the air with a multitude of steams and vapours from the soil and water. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth I. 371 The assemblage of the rays darting upon the water..will cause it to rise in a light thin steam above the surface. 1859 Ld. Tennyson Guinevere in Idylls of King 256 She saw, Wet with the mists and smitten by the lights, The Dragon of the great Pendragonship Blaze, making all the night a steam of fire. 1906 Baroness Orczy Son of People (1908) xvi. 175 [The sun's] noonday rays drew a warm steam from the wet earth. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > physical chemistry > gaseous phase > [noun] > gas steam1662 gas1669 1662 R. Boyle Def. Doctr. Spring of Air iii. xviii. 81 Glass..is impervious to the subtilest steams that are. 1670 J. Beale in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 5 1154 The changes of Heat and Cold, with other unknown Steames. 1684 R. Waller tr. Ess. Nat. Exper. Acad. del Cimento 18 The Liquor..will fall down..like Dew separated from that fine steame of Air contained in the froth. a1704 J. Locke Elem. Nat. Philos. vi, in Coll. Several Pieces (1720) 198 Besides the springy particles of pure air, the Atmosphere is made up of several steams or minute particles of several sorts, rising from the earth and the waters, and floating in the air. 6. a. The vapour into which water is converted when heated. In popular language, applied to the visible vapour which floats in the air in the form of a white cloud or mist, and which consists of minute globules or vesicles of liquid water suspended in a mixture of gaseous water and air. (Also sometimes applied to the vapour arising from other liquids when heated.) In modern scientific and technical language, applied only to water in the form of an invisible gas.The invisible ‘steam’, in the modern scientific sense, is, when its temperature is lowered, converted into the white vapour called ‘steam’ in popular language, and this under continued cooling, becomes ‘water’ in the liquid form. dry steam, in Steam-engine working, steam containing no suspended vesicles of water: opposed to wet steam. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > liquid > moisture or humidity > [noun] > moist vapour misteOE reekeOE humoura1382 steamc1440 the world > matter > gas > [noun] > fumes or vapour > water in the form of > steam smoke1398 steamc1440 c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 473/2 Steem [Winch. MS. Steme] of hothe lycure, vapor. 1631 B. Jonson New Inne ii. vi. 81 Pru... we shall..send you downe to the dresser, and the dishes... Commit you to the steem! Lad. Or els condemn you to the bottles. a1682 Sir T. Browne Certain Misc. Tracts (1683) 113 The steam or vapour of artificial and natural baths. 1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World xvii. 480 They cover the mouth of the Pot with leaves, to keep in the steam, while it boils. 1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 403. ¶3 A Knot of Theorists, who sat in the inner Room, within the Steams of the Coffee Pot. 1781 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall II. xviii. 85 The adulteress was suffocated by the steam of a bath, which, for that purpose, had been heated to an extraordinary degree. 1785 Priestley in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 75 305 Having transmitted steam, or the vapour of water, through a copper tube. 1815 J. Smith Panorama Sci. & Art II. 505 The steam of alcohol at 174° is equal to that of water at 212°. 1839 Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 2 287 7 lbs. of coal are required to convert 1 cubic foot of water at 40° into atmospheric steam. 1847 Ld. Tennyson Princess Prol. 4 A dozen angry models jetted steam. 1878 T. H. Huxley Physiography (ed. 2) 39 The steam, or watery vapour, when pure and uncondensed, is..transparent. 1884 C. E. Dutton in 4th Ann. Rep. U.S. Geol. Surv. 1882–3 110 Condensed steam floating away in the form of white vapor. 1894 Times 15 Aug. 12/2 A boiler which supplies wet steam is a bad boiler, because wet steam is prejudicial to the efficiency of the engine. 1895 Model Steam Eng. 51 The purpose of the steam-dome is to collect the steam in as dry a condition as possible. b. The visible vesicles produced by the condensation of watery vapour, as drops forming on a surface, e.g. a mirror or window-pane. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > liquid > moisture or humidity > [noun] > condensed moisture > of or from a vapour steam1615 coagulation1669 devaporation1787 1615 H. Crooke Μικροκοσμογραϕια 88 When a Vessell of boyling water is couered, though the couer be hot, yet the vapour of the water turneth into a steame vppon it, and will stand in drops. 1699 tr. H. de Blancourt Art of Glass 350 You must keep these [steel] Mirrours from the Moistness of the Air, and Steams. 7. a. The vapour of boiling water used, by confinement in specially contrived engines, for the generation of mechanical power. Hence, the mechanical power thus generated. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > steam engine > [noun] > steam steam1699 1699 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 21 228 [Savery's ‘fire-engine’.] Two Cocks which convey the Steam by turns, to the Vessels D. 1765 Watt in Muirhead Invent. Watt (1854) I. 3 Mine ought to raise water to 44 feet with the same quantity of steam that theirs does to 32. 1788 J. Rumsey (title) A short Treatise on Steam, whereby is clearly shewn..that steam may be applied to propel Boats or Vessels of any burthen. 1825 W. Hone Every-day Bk. (1826) I. 1535 The Times..of Tuesday, November the 29th, 1814, was the first newspaper printed by steam. 1847 C. Dickens Dombey & Son (1848) xxxv. 354 Do steam, tide, wind, and horses, all abate their speed? a1862 H. T. Buckle Misc. Wks. (1872) I. 250 By the application of steam, we have diminished space. b. figurative. Energy, ‘go’, driving power, and the like. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > [noun] greennesseOE lustinessc1325 forcea1375 vigourc1386 virrc1575 vigour1602 nerve1605 vivacity1649 vis1650 actuosity1660 amenity1661 vogue1674 energy1783 smeddum1790 dash1796 throughput1808 feck1811 go1825 steam1826 jism1842 vim1843 animalism1848 fizz1856 jasm1860 verve1863 snap1865 sawdusta1873 élan1880 stingo1885 energeticism1891 sprawl1894 zip1899 pep1908 jazz1912 zoom1926 toe1963 zap1968 stank1997 1826 B. Disraeli Vivian Grey I. ii. ii. 94 Has not your Lordship treasure? There is your moral steam which can work the world. 1875 ‘R. H. Blake-Humfrey’ Eton Boating Bk. (ed. 2) 60 The Etonians had not steam enough. At Hammersmith, Westminster was two lengths ahead. 1898 Daily News 24 Nov. 7/3 Corbett now appeared a trifle weary..and was lacking in steam. 1900 Westm. Gaz. 23 Oct. 9/2 All the steam has gone out of American Railroad shares. c. by steam, (to travel) by steamer. under steam, worked by steam (as opposed to under sail). ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > [phrase] > by ship > by steamer by steam1829 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > mechanically propelled vessels > [phrase] > worked by steam under steam1874 1829 W. Scott Jrnl. 18 June (1946) 84 Tomorrow I expect Sophia and her family by Steam. 1839 N. Wiseman in W. Ward Life Cardinal Wiseman (1897) I. ix. 313 I shall travel..by the mail direct to Marseilles,..and so by steam to Cività Vecchia. 1874 F. G. D. Bedford Sailor's Pocket Bk. iii. 49 In the following Rules, every Steam Ship which is under Sail and not under steam, is to be considered a Sailing Ship. d. In phrases descriptive of the working of a steam-engine, esp. of a locomotive; often used figuratively; e.g. (at) full (half, etc.) steam; with full or all one's steam on; to have (all, much, etc.) steam on; to get up steam, put on steam; to blow off steam, shut off steam, turn off steam; under steam, with steam up, in steam, with the engine working or ready to start working; under one's own steam; like steam (Australian), furiously; to let off steam: frequently figurative, to relieve one's pent-up energy by vigorous activity; to give vent to one's feelings, esp. harmlessly; to run out of steam: see to run out of —— 1c at run v. Phrasal verbs 2. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > steam engine > [adjective] > working or ready to start working in steam1768 under steam1860 with steam up1870 society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > steam engine > operate steam engine [verb (intransitive)] > turn off or let off steam shut off steam1824 to let off steam1831 turn off steam1878 society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > steam engine > operate steam engine [verb (intransitive)] to get up steam1832 put on steam1878 the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > manifestation of emotion > manifest itself [verb (intransitive)] > give vent to feelings acangc1225 to run out1719 to let off steam1857 society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > steam engine > [noun] > power of indicated (horse-) power1875 (at) full (half, etc.) steam1878 the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > acting vigorously or energetically [phrase] > with great vigour or energy with (also in) mood and maineOE vigour13.. with or by (all one's) might and mainc1330 with (one's) forcec1380 like anything1665 hammer and tongs1708 like stour1787 (in) double tides1788 like blazes1818 like winking1827 with a will1827 like winky1830 like all possessed1833 in a big way1840 like (or worse than) sin1840 full swing1843 like a Trojan1846 like one o'clock1847 like sixty1848 like forty1852 like wildfire1857 like old boots1865 like blue murder1867 like steam1905 like stink1929 like one thing1938 like a demon1945 up a storm1953 the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > [phrase] > with no aid from others under one's own steam1912 1768 Watt in Muirhead Invent. Watt (1854) I. 18 I am now getting an apparatus ready for setting it [the engine] wholly in steam as before. 1824 ‘R. Stuart’ Descr. Hist. Steam Engine 132 The motion of the piston was equalized by shutting off the steam sooner or later from the cylinder. 1831 Rep. Select Comm. Steam Carriages 20 in Parl. Papers (H.C. 324) VIII. 203 Are you frequently obliged to let off steam? 1832 F. Marryat Newton Forster III. iii. 39 I have..a way of going a-head, by getting up the steam..—and the fuel is brandy. 1837 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers xlvii. 512 Get on a little faster; put a little more steam on, Ma'am, pray. 1837 F. Marryat Snarleyyow I. xi. 144 The widow..sat..fuming and blowing off her steam. 1844 Darwin in Life & Lett. (1887) I. 301 Get up your steam, if this weather lasts, and have a ramble in Wales. 1851 Blackburn Standard 5 Nov. 2/5 The steamer's officers ordering full steam ahead. 1857 T. Hughes Tom Brown's School Days ii. ii. 261 Now jumping the old iron-bound tables,..then joining in some chorus of merry voices; in fact, blowing off his steam, as we should now call it. 1860 Mercantile Marine Mag. 7 216 Orders were given..to let the ship go under easy steam. 1863 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Feb. 249/1 This is a free country, and a few eloquent or blustering Radicals serve to ‘let off the steam’ of their class. 1869 H. James Let. 16 Apr. in J. Strouse Alice James (1980) viii. 138 I feel an irresistible need to let off steam periodically & to confide to a sympathetic ear the impressions which the week has generated in my soul. 1870 Remin. Amer. 203 Their steam fire-engines..are always kept in readiness with steam up and the horses harnessed. 1873 Routledge's Young Gentleman's Mag. June 392/2 The Forward was under steam, ready to seize the first opening to make her exit. 1878 W. H. G. Kingston Three Admirals xviii. 416 Full steam was put on. 1878 W. H. G. Kingston Three Admirals xviii. 417 The engineer having thoughtfully turned off the steam to prevent the boilers from exploding. 1881 M. Reynolds Engine-driving Life 112 Of course his engine is in steam. All is done for him. 1883 G. M. Fenn Middy & Ensign xxxix. 237 Every effort being made by the firemen to get up steam. 1887 F. Francis Saddle & Mocassin 107 ‘And he [the bull] came for you?’ ‘When he'd got up steam he did.’ 1893 Times 14 Aug. 8/6 Captain Hicks immediately ordered full steam astern, and at the same moment the helm to be put a starboard. 1894 J. D. Astley Fifty Years of my Life I. 82 I naturally went to grass through having too much steam on to be able to pull up in time. 1896 R. Kipling Seven Seas 71 Half-steam ahead by guess and lead, for the sun is mostly veiled. 1899 T. C. Allbutt et al. Syst. Med. VIII. 147 A result of some previous shutting off of nervous steam. 1905 H. Lawson Coll. Verse (1968) II. 4 We was draftin' 'em out for the homeward track and sharin' 'em round like steam. 1912 Conrad in English Rev. XI. 311 We are not allowed to bring them in under their own steam. 1916 H. J. Laski in Holmes-Laski Lett. (1953) I. 25 I intend to write you a weekly letter to Washington—for I must let off steam somewhere. 1919 M. K. Bradby Psycho-anal. 70 Commonsense says that it is better..‘to let off steam’ than to ‘eat your heart out’. 1920 Times 9 Apr. 10/1 Mr Chamberlain yesterday received the order to go full steam ahead with his budget. 1931 Times Lit. Suppl. 1 Oct. 737/3 She..wrote sedate and quite readable novels to the prescribed pattern—but let off steam in stormy poems privately printed. 1949 J. Symons Bland Beginning 142 ‘Would you be kind enough to..see Miss Cleverly home.’ ‘That's not necessary... I can move under my own steam.’ 1976 J. I. M. Stewart Young Pattullo iii. 72 It's just a dining club letting off steam. 1979 B. Hardy World owes Me Nothing 102 I hammered at the door like steam and over he came and opened it. 2012 Foreign Affairs 91 iii. 129 As Western governments have scaled back their support for renewable power, China has been pushing full steam ahead. e. transferred. Cheap wine laced with methylated spirits; methylated spirits as an intoxicant. Australian and New Zealand slang. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > wine > drinks made with wine > [noun] > other wine drinks rambooze1656 barley wine1728 hock-cup1851 speedball1926 spritz1937 steam1941 spritzer1953 Sangria1961 vin blanc cassis1964 kir1966 1941 S. J. Baker Pop. Dict. Austral. Slang 71 Steam, cheap wine, esp. laced with methylated spirits. 1963 A. Lubbock Austral. Roundabout 59 To my regret, I never got a chance to sample either ‘plonk’, or ‘steam’! 1966 J. K. Baxter Pig Island Lett. 36 I'd give old Rose the go-by For a bottle of steam tonight. 8. a. Short for steam-coal n. at Compounds 7. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > coal or types of coal > [noun] coal1253 sea-coal1253 pit-coal1483 cannel1541 earth coala1552 horse coal1552 Newcastle coal1552 stone-coal1585 cannel coal1587 parrot1594 burn-coal1597 lithanthrax1612 stony coal1617 Welsh coala1618 land-coala1661 foot coal1665 peacock coal1686 rough coal1686 white coal1686 heathen-coalc1697 coal-stone1708 round1708 stone-coal1708 bench-coal1712 slipper coal1712 black coal1713 culm1742 rock coal1750 board coal1761 Bovey coal1761 house coal1784 mineral coal1785 splint1789 splint coal1789 jet coal1794 anthracite1797 wood-coal1799 blind-coal1802 black diamond1803 silk-coal1803 glance-coal1805 lignite1808 Welsh stone-coal1808 soft1811 spout coals1821 spouter1821 Wallsend1821 brown coal1833 paper coal1833 steam-coal1850 peat-coal1851 cherry-coal1853 household1854 sinter coal1854 oil coal1856 raker1857 Kilkenny coal1861 Pottery coal1867 silkstone1867 block coal1871 admiralty1877 rattlejack1877 bunker1883 fusain1883 smitham1883 bunker coal1885 triping1886 trolley coal1890 kibble1891 sea-borne1892 jet1893 steam1897 sack coal1898 Welsh1898 navigation coal1900 Coalite1906 clarain1919 durain1919 vitrain1919 single1921 kolm1930 hards1956 1897 Daily News 25 Jan. 9/3 Best qualities steam are now up to 11s 3d per ton. 1903 Times 1 Dec. 3/5 Steams remain dull and generally slow of sale, owing to the poor trade prevailing among steam users generally. b. Short for steam radio n. at Compounds 7. ΘΚΠ society > communication > broadcasting > radio broadcasting > [noun] radio1907 wireless1922 the spoken word1940 sound1949 steam radio1957 steam1959 1959 C. MacInnes Absolute Beginners 112 I heard one of your arias on the steam, last evening. 1960 Spectator 15 July 103 John Arlott over on steam is still the best of the commentators. 1973 G. Talbot Ten Seconds from Now (1974) v. 83 Frank Gillard..crowned his Corporation career by becoming Managing Director of Radio, our ‘Head of Steam’. 9. [ < steam v.] A trip by steamer. colloquial. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > [noun] > a voyage > short voyage or trip > in specific type of craft pull1793 row1832 steam1854 1854 C. Kingsley Lett. (1877) I. 419 Had a charming steam across the Firth of Forth. 1905 Daily Chron. 16 Sept. 4/4 He saw before him a few hours' steam to Caen. 10. [ < steam v.] A dish cooked by steaming. colloquial. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > food by way of preparation > [noun] > cooked food > steamed food steam1900 1900 Soc. Life Brit. Army 98 Apart from soup, the cooking arrangements will only allow of Tommy being given his choice between a bake and a steam. A steam resembles what we have been taught to call Irish stew. Compounds C1. simple attributive = of or pertaining to steam; consisting of steam. ΚΠ 1831 Rep. Select Comm. Steam Carriages 25 in Parl. Papers (H.C. 324) VIII. 203 The comparative expense between Horse and Steam Power for drawing Carriages on common roads. 1838 T. Tredgold Steam Engine 416 The force of the draught produced by the steam-blast is so great that cinders are drawn through the tubes. 1869 E. A. Parkes Man. Pract. Hygiene (ed. 3) 145 The moving agent here is the force of the steam-jet. 1879 ‘G. Eliot’ Theophrastus Such ii. 49 The white steam-pennon flies along it. 1881 J. W. Judd Volcanoes 23 The roaring of the steam-jets may be heard for many miles around. 1897 A. Geikie Anc. Volcanoes Brit. I. 16 The steam-cavities of lavas. C2. With reference to heating, cooking, or washing by steam, and in the names of implements and apparatus used in these processes, as steam-bakery, steam-bath, steam-box, steam-chamber, steam-chest, steam-coil, steam-kiln, steam-kitchen, steam-laundry, steam-oven, steam-pan, steam-pipe, †steam-pot, steam radiator, steam-table, steam-tank, steam-tube, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > washing > washing oneself or body > [noun] > bathing > a bath > hot air or steam bath stew1390 stovec1485 stufe1541 stow1614 furo1615 Turkish bath1644 estuary1657 steam-bath1725 Russian bath1770 stufa1832 sweat-bath1877 sauna1881 shvitz1937 the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > heating or making hot > that which or one who heats > [noun] > a device for heating or warming > heater using steam steam radiator1725 steam heatera1884 pressure heater1893 1725 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Œconomique at Gooseberry-wine When it is thoroughly cold it is put into a Steam-Pot. 1794 J. B. S. Morritt Let. 24 June (1914) ii. 47 After a violent steam bath, they would run out and roll in the snow. 1797 Encycl. Brit. XVII. 772/2 Steam-Kitchen. 1827 M. Faraday Chem. Manip. iv. 133 The figure represents an arrangement in which a saucepan is converted into a temporary steam chamber. 1828 R. Duppa Trav. Italy 142 The steam-baths of Dædalus..consist of several sudorific grottos. 1832 Boston (Lincs.) Herald 20 Nov. 4/3 A new patent steam-oven for baking bread. 1856 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. I. xxxi. 421 We have passed wooden steam-tubes through the deck-house to carry off the vapors of our cooking-stove. 1857 W. A. Miller Elements Chem. III. 672 Heat, furnished by steam-pipes. 1862 Internat. Exhib.: Illustr. Catal. Industr. Dept. II. xxxi. 7/2 Steam Table for dishing up. 1862 Internat. Exhib.: Illustr. Catal. Industr. Dept. II. xxxi. 8/1 Steam Kettles of copper or block tin, for boiling meat, vegetables, puddings, &c. 1869 Ann. Rep. Commissioner Agric. 1868 427 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (40th Congr., 3rd Sess.: House of Representatives Executive Doc.) XV The food is cooked in a large steam-box. 1879 Bradstreet's 22 Nov. 2/1 In close rooms close stoves are better than steam radiators. 1897 W. D. Howells Landlord Lion's Head 142 The reeking steam-table, with its great tanks of soup and vegetables. 1903 G. Ade In Babel 29 For ten years it had braced itself against the onsweeping rush of big machine-shops and steam-bakeries. 1962 A. Lurie Love & Friendship xii. 228 That..asthma kind of like a steam radiator. 1977 C. McCullough Thorn Birds xi. 251 Hot nights in Gilly were bearable compared to this steam bath. C3. In the names of the various contrivances for containing, conveying, or regulating the steam in a steam-engine, as steam-box, steam-case, steam-chamber, steam-chest, steam-cock, †steam-course, steam-cylinder, steam-dome, steam-gauge, steam-pipe, steam-port, steam-stack, steam trap, steam-valve, steam-way, etc. ΚΠ 1765 Watt in Muirhead Invent. Watt (1854) I. 4 The moment the steam-cock was opened, the piston descended with rapidity. 1769 Watt in Muirhead Invent. Watt (1854) I. 53 To-day I stopped the neck of the steam-pipe where it enters the cylinder. 1769 Watt in Muirhead Invent. Watt (1854) I. 73 The size of the steam-valve is six square inches. 1797 J. Curr Coal Viewer 41 A steam chest [in a fire-engine] upon a good construction, (a) being the steam valve. 1825 ‘J. Nicholson’ Operative Mechanic 181 C, the steam-gauge. 1825 ‘J. Nicholson’ Operative Mechanic 207 Fans..opening and closing the steam-course. 1838 Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 1 139/2 The jacket of an 80-inch steam cylinder. 1839 R. S. Robinson Naut. Steam Engine Explained 51 Sliding the valve up or down will permit this steam to enter the cylinder, either by the upper or lower steam port. 1873 G. E. Webster Steam Eng. & Steam i. 61 The Steam Dome serves the purpose of drying the steam. 1875 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Steam-way, a passage leading from the steam-port of a valve to the cylinder. 1877 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Steam-trap, a self-acting device for the discharge of condensed water from steam-engines or steam-pipes. 1935 J. Joyce Let. 28 Aug. (1957) 381 I would also like a pleasure yacht with a steamstack. 1955 Times 12 July 1/6 Before ordering any steam trap ask for its expectation of life. It is no use saving on steam equipment to pay it out later servicing traps. C4. In the names of implements, machines, processes, etc. operated by steam or by a steam-engine, as steam-crane, steam dredge, steam dredger, steam drill, steam-dryer, steam elevator, †steam-gun, steam-hammer, steam-mill, steam-milling, steam-plough, steam-ploughing, steam press, steam-pump, steam shovel (hence steam-shovelful), steam-thresher, steam-threshing, steam trowel, steam-trumpet, steam-whim, steam-winch, etc. ΘΚΠ society > communication > printing > printing machine or press > [noun] > steam press steam press1801 society > occupation and work > equipment > mills > [noun] > other mills martinet?c1475 watermill1580 overfall mill1615 breast mill1659 undershot1705 merchant mill1759 pounding mill1785 floating mill1796 steam-mill1801 pecker1802 chip mill1819 society > occupation and work > equipment > earth-moving and excavating equipment > [noun] > excavator steam shovel1801 steam trowel1801 excavator1843 earthmover1871 navvy1877 steam-navvy1881 backhoe1928 Traxcavator1940 back-acter1957 society > occupation and work > equipment > earth-moving and excavating equipment > [noun] > dredging equipment dredge1471 clam-shell1508 drag1611 steam dredge1801 dredging-machine1830 hedgehog1838 bag and spoon1840 hydrophore1842 dredger1863 gold dredge1881 gold dredger1897 suction dredge1901 bucket dredge1907 cutter-dredge1913 the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > sound of horn > [noun] > horn or hooter post-horna1652 steam-trumpet1801 blast-horn1844 fish-horn1856 hooter1878 klaxon1910 beep-beep1929 society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > other means of conveyance > [noun] > lift or hoist steam elevator1801 hoist1835 lift1851 elevator1853 tube-lift1915 stairlift1977 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessels with other specific uses > [noun] > dredger-hopper steam dredger1801 steam hopper1812 hopper-dredge1896 suction dredger1911 society > occupation and work > equipment > piercing or boring tools > [noun] > drill > power drills steam drill1801 power drill1867 machine drill1869 society > occupation and work > equipment > digging or lifting tools > [noun] > shovel > other shovels shod-shovel1465 scoop1487 peel?a1500 paring-shovel1531 cole-rake1575 rabble1664 van1664 steam shovel1801 ballast wagon1838 wirra1896 power shovel1902 society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for altering dimensions > [noun] > press > other presses rolling press1785 packing press1796 steam press1801 bench press1852 platen press1854 hot press1943 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > mechanically propelled vessels > [noun] > propelled by steam engine > other steam vessels steam dredger1801 steam barge1812 steam hopper1812 steam-launch1812 steam schooner1812 steam-yacht1812 steam-tug1835 pleasure steamer1839 tug-steamer1861 ditcher1877 alligator1884 turnabout1885 tank-steamer1889 whaleback1891 whalebacker1891 society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > steam engine > [adjective] steam1801 power-driven1835 the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > washing > washing oneself or body > [noun] > bathing > place for bathing > bath-house > hot bathroom or sweating-room stovec1485 sudatory1615 laconicum1696 laconic1742 sweating-room1744 caldarium1753 sudatorium1757 steam1801 sudarium1852 sauna1881 sweat-lodge1887 sweat-box1974 1801 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 91 160 It..has now four fire-engines and two steam-whims on it. 1804 Jrnl. Nat. Philos. Mar. 161 (title) Description of a new Steam Digester for Philosophical Researches. 1812 Ann. Reg., Chron. 79 They entered into a solemn obligation to destroy steam-looms, [etc.]. 1815 D. Drake Nat. & Statist. View Cincinnati iii. 137 The most capacious..building in this place is the Steam Mill. 1824 Reg. Arts & Sci. 2 105 Perkins's ‘Steam Gun’. 1843 Nasmyth in Civil Engineer & Archit. Jrnl. 6 41/2 With a view to relieve all these defects, I have contrived my direct action steam hammer. 1843 C. Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit (1844) xi. 131 A greater number..than the steam-gun can discharge balls in a minute. 1847 Mechanics' Mag. 30 Jan. 98 Mr. Osborn's patent system of steam ploughing. 1857 D. E. E. Braman Information about Texas iii. 79 There are three steam-mills in operation, sawing lumber, and grinding wheat and corn. 1861 Mitchell's Maritime Reg. 1651/3 The launch of the Ancona, a very fine steam dredger, of 300 tons, recently took place at Southampton. 1865 J. Ruskin Sesame & Lilies i. 35 The Word of God..cannot be..sown on any wayside by help either of steam plough or steam press. 1873 H. James Let. 25 Apr. (1974) I. 373 It was once a goodly old palace and though pitifully inconvenient as a hotel, is charminger to stay in than if it had a steam elevator. 1874 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. I. 747/2 In 1796, Watt made a steam dredger for deepening Sunderland Harbor. 1877 Encycl. Brit. VII. 464/1 The construction of large river steam dredges is now carried on by many engineering firms. 1879 R. J. Burdette Hawk-Eyes 25 The depot policeman looked in to say to him that if he was tired out, he would send in a section hand or the steam shovel to give him a spell. 1880 Harper's Mag. Aug. 344/2 The grist from it [sc. the tide mill] is said to be of a better quality than from the steam-mills, as being less heated in the process. 1884 Leisure Hour Sept. 533/2 With one blow from a steam-riveter..they are securely fixed. 1889 ‘F. Anstey’ Pariah vi. i They're putting up swings and a steam-circus and tents. 1891 T. Hardy Tess of the D'Urbervilles III. xlviii. 148 I have told the farmer that he has no right to employ women at steam-threshing. 1891 Argus (Melbourne) 7 Nov. 13/4 Occasionally..a British India liner rouses the echoes with the hoarse call of its steam siren. 1892 Lockwood's Dict. Mech. Engin. Suppl. Steam Blower, a pipe and cock on a locomotive, employed to create a draught before the engine starts. 1893 K. D. Wiggin Polly Oliver (1894) xvi. 173 Who ever feels like telling a precious secret over a steam-heater? 1898 ‘H. S. Merriman’ Roden's Corner v. 45 Presently the jerk and clink of the steam-winch told that the anchor was being got home. 1902 Encycl. Brit. XXX. 763/2 The principal types of mechanical excavators are the steam navvy, or steam shovel, as it is commonly called in the United States. 1904 Jrnl. Inst. Electr. Engineers 33 965 Steam-dryers are fitted in the flues of two of the boilers. 1906 T. Roosevelt Let. 10 Jan. in Proc. Congr. Constr. Patriotism 20 Nov. (1919) 182 There the huge steam-shovels are hard at it; scooping huge masses of rock and gravel and dirt. 1906 W. De Morgan Joseph Vance xli. 367 He told how she and he were awakened by the sudden stoppage of the screw, followed by the roar of the steam-trumpet. 1907 J. H. Patterson Man-eaters of Tsavo xvii. 187 My heart was thumping like a steam hammer. 1925 L. R. Harris in Messenger VII. 387/1 A so-called ‘steam-drill’..guaranteed to drill a hole faster than any ten men could drill one in the old way with sledge hammer and steel. 1928 Observer 15 Apr. 5/4 The people in the restaurants shovel food into their mouths as the steam-trowel takes up its load of earth. 1937 Discovery Dec. 362/2 All advances in technique such as the steam press and the linotype, had been developed by the news-printer and later used by the book-printer. 1966 T. Pynchon Crying of Lot 49 iii. 65 A wildcat transistor outfit that..was underselling even the Japanese and hauling in loot by the steamshovelful. 1972 J. Mosedale Football vii. 95 After a trip through the steam presses, caps and uniforms were either too large or too small. 1978 J. Irving World according to Garp iv. 79 His mouth still reminded Garp of a steam shovel's power. C5. With reference to locomotion by steam-power, and in names of vehicles and vessels propelled by steam, as steam barge, steam bus, steam-ferry, steam ferry-boat, steam-flat, steam-frigate, steam hopper (hopper n.1 6), steam-launch, steam lawn-mower, steam locomotion, steam locomotive, steam lorry, steam-navigation, steam-navy, steam-omnibus, steam-packet, steam railway, steam-ram, steam schooner, steam-train, steam-tram, steam-trawler, steam-trawling, steam-whaler, steam-yacht, etc. See also steam-car n., steam-carriage n., steam-tug n. at Compounds 7, etc., and the main-words steamboat n., etc. ΘΚΠ society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > [noun] > by steam locomotion steam locomotion1812 the world > food and drink > farming > gardening > equipment and buildings > [noun] > lawn-mower steam lawn-mower1812 grass cutter1834 grass mower1855 lawn-mower1875 grass trimmer1876 lawn-cutter1897 motor mower1907 power mower1913 lawn edger1960 Strimmer1978 society > travel > rail travel > railway system or organization > [noun] > a railway > for steam-trains steam railway1812 steam-road1837 society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [noun] > locomotive > steam locomotive steam locomotive1812 steam-engine1815 steamer1837 Puffing Billy1848 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessels with other specific uses > [noun] > dredger-hopper steam dredger1801 steam hopper1812 hopper-dredge1896 suction dredger1911 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > mechanically propelled vessels > [noun] > propelled by steam engine > steam ferry steam-ferry1812 steam ferry-boat1812 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > mechanically propelled vessels > [noun] > propelled by steam engine > other steam vessels steam dredger1801 steam barge1812 steam hopper1812 steam-launch1812 steam schooner1812 steam-yacht1812 steam-tug1835 pleasure steamer1839 tug-steamer1861 ditcher1877 alligator1884 turnabout1885 tank-steamer1889 whaleback1891 whalebacker1891 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessel for transporting people or goods > [noun] > ferry > types of toni1582 horse-boat1591 bac1676 ferry bridge1696 rope-ferry1755 pont1776 ferry flat1805 steam-ferry1812 steam ferry-boat1812 night boat1839 bar-boat1857 train ferry-boat1867 car ferry1884 grind1889 swinging-bridge1892 train ferry1900 night ferry1948 SeaCat1954 walla-walla1957 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > pleasure vessel > [noun] > yacht > types of yacht steam-yacht1812 skimmer1844 schooner-yacht1876 cruiser1879 keel1883 skimming-dish1884 cutter-yacht1885 bulb-keel1893 keel-boat1893 forty1894 half-rater1894 forty-tonner1895 one-designer1897 raceabout1897 forty-footer1902 sonder1907 star1911 tonnage-cheater1912 scow1929 tabloid1930 Yngling1969 maxi yacht1974 society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > [noun] > steam-powered > steam lorry steam lorry1812 society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > public service vehicle > [noun] > omnibus > steam-driven steam bus1812 steam-omnibus1812 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessel of specific construction or shape > flat-bottomed boat > [noun] > barge > other types of barge coal barge1720 budgerow1727 water1727 brick barge1738 tent-barge1796 water barge1798 passage-barge1804 steam barge1812 schooner barge1819 tongkang1834 bumbarge1839 Tom Pudding1880 grain-barge1902 butty1923 support barge1967 reel barge1972 society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > steam engine > [adjective] > propelled by steam steam1812 superheated1864 1812 in Mechanics' Mag. (1847) 46 21/1 Steam passage boat, The Comet, Between Glasgow, Greenock, and Helensburgh. 1814 Weekly Reg. (Baltimore) 128/2 The steam frigate Fulton the First was launched at New York October 31. 1819 (title) The Thanet Itinerary, or Steam-Yacht Companion. 1819 N.Y. Evening Post 4 Jan. 2/5 Steam sch[oone]r Ramapo, Reid, New Orleans. 1821 J. W. Croker Diary 29 Aug. Sailed in the steampacket, the wind quite against us. 1831 Jrnl. House of Commons 6 Sept. 86 827/2 The frequent calamities by Steam Navigation. 1834 J. B. Purcell Jrnl. 21 Mar. in Catholic Hist. Rev. (1919) V. 253 Mr. Mtgomery an hour & ½ in crossing the River in Steam-ferry boat. 1842 J. McDonogh Papers (1898) 65 The steam ferry which runs from one side of the river to the other lands a short distance below my house. 1849 E. C. Agnew Rome & Abbey v. 47 They entered the steam-train for Bruges. 1849 Jrnl. House of Commons 23 Feb. 104 87/2 The practicability of providing, by means of the Commercial Steam Marine of the Country, a reserve Steam Navy, available for the National Defence when required. 1860 Ann. Reg. 202 Our government were urged to adopt the scheme of steam-rams. 1861 H. Mayhew London Labour III. 186/1 He was..steward on board the Royal Hydaspes, a steam screw she is. 1866 Mitchell's Maritime Reg. 18 Aug. 1033/3 Messrs. C. and W. Earle launched from their yard a steam barge [named Lion] the first of its class built in Hull. 1869 Bradshaw's Railway Man. 21 34 A steam ferry across the river Severn. 1872 F. Trevithick Life Richard Trevithick II. xxi. 207 Cast-iron wheels were ordered with a view to steam locomotion in the Cordilleras. 1872 F. Trevithick Life Richard Trevithick II. xvii. 26 The high-pressure steam-puffer..moved.. towards the broken mass..and..changing its powers from steam-crane to steam-locomotive, conveyed it to the port. 1877 Encycl. Brit. VII. 464/2 The steam hoppers employed to receive and remove the dredgings carry about 500 tons of excavations. 1878 C. Schreiber Jrnl. 30 June (1911) II. 155 The Embassy steam launch met us. 1879 Encycl. Brit. IX. 250/2 Steam trawling. 1884 J. Hatton in Harper's Mag. Feb. 344/2 The steam-launch is the snob of the Thames. 1890 G. Meredith Let. 14 Apr. (1970) II. 997 I am promised a steam-yacht to take me up at Oban. 1892 Speaker 3 Sept. 289/2 The high road, with its shrieking steam-tram. 1899 Westm. Gaz. 25 Oct. 6/3 The steamer Germanic was run into last night in the Mersey by a steam hopper. 1902 H. C. Moore Omnibuses & Cabs i. iv. 38 The first real steam omnibuses, the ‘Era’ and ‘Autopsy’, were invented by Walter Hancock, of Stratford, and placed on the London roads in 1833. 1902 Encycl. Brit. XXXII. 845/1 This was the pioneer of the steam-trade along the western coast of South America. 1915 Naut. Gaz. 31 Mar. 4/1 The Panama Canal has brought us the steam schooner and other Pacific curiosities. 1916 Law Rep.: King's Bench Div. 1 148 The defendants, who were brewers, used a steam lorry weighing five tons for the purpose of delivering beer from their premises to various public-houses served by them. 1923 Blackwood's Mag. Nov. 681/1 In the harbour..there were lying odd craft... The one romance of life for these steam-hoppers..had been quenched. 1928 J. Mason Before Mast in Sailing Ships 174 He was picked up by a steam barge which happened to be passing. 1933 V. Sommerfield London's Buses 5 (caption) Three of Hancock's Steam Buses, 1832 to 1836. 1946 G. Foreman Last Trek of Indians 116 A steam ferryboat was in service. 1946 Noble & Junner Vital to Life of Nation vi. 88 Sumner..began experimenting in the design of a steam wagon in 1889, a year or two later producing a steam lawn mower. 1946 Noble & Junner Vital to Life of Nation vi. 96 (caption) A London steam omnibus of 1902. 1958 Listener 11 Sept. 379/2 He was knocked down and killed by a steam lorry. 1965 D. Arundell Story of Sadler's Wells xi. 144 Mrs. Warner and Phelps were shown arriving..in a first-class steam-railway carriage. 1970 F. McKenna Gloss. Railwaymen's Talk 1 Most steam locomotive depots in England are embedded in the older parts of our towns and cities. 1971 Sat. Rev. (U.S.) 6 Nov. 86/3 The purpose of the California steam-bus project is to demonstrate how effectively city buses can operate at low levels of exhaust emission. 1977 D. Jack Leyland Bus i. 11 The back-bone of the business was production of steam lawn-mowers selling with 30-inch roller at £85 each. 1977 H. Fast Immigrants i. 72 I got two steam schooners, wooden ships, six hundred tons each. 1980 Times 25 June 4/2 The inaugural voyage of the National Trust's restored 1859 steam yacht the Gondola took place on Coniston Water yesterday. C6. a. Instrumental, with participial adjectives, as steam-bent, steam-driven, steam-going, steam-hauled, steam-heated, steam-operated, steam-ridden (figurative), steam-set, steam-wrought; steam-like adj. Also with verbal nouns, as steam-bending, steam cleaning, steam-heating; and verbs, as steam-bend, steam-clean (transitive). ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > other cleaning methods, devices, or substances > clean by other miscellaneous methods [verb (transitive)] rakec1400 pickle1605 to rub down1682 thumb1768 steam-clean1835 bread1869 French-chalk1870 society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [adjective] > type of train carriaged1776 steam-hauled1835 steam-operated1835 jerkwater1852 articulated1884 vestibuled1890 multiple-unit1902 air-braked1905 collision-proof1906 pull-and-push1914 push-and-pull1927 sealed1949 drive-on1954 society > occupation and work > industry > manufacturing processes > perform general or industrial manufacturing processes [verb (intransitive)] > bend with aid of steam steam-bend1835 the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > other cleaning methods, devices, or substances > [noun] > methods steam cleaning1835 self-cleansing1837 self-cleaning1843 pickling1881 ion bombardment1952 society > occupation and work > industry > manufacturing processes > [noun] > processing > types of shaping process moulding1327 turningc1440 turnerya1680 turnery work1744 steam-bending1835 wheeling1882 fabrication1926 hot moulding1935 tableting1947 micromachining1955 society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > materials having undergone process > [adjective] > shaped by specific means or in specific way turnedc1440 steam-bent1835 monobloc1909 injection-moulded1947 press-moulded1951 the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > heating or making hot > [noun] > by specific means fire (or heat) of suppression1663 steam-heating1835 solar heating1903 the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > heating or making hot > [adjective] > heated or warmed > heated by specific means steam-heated1835 coal-fired1855 gas-fired1862 solar-heated1952 1835 A. Ure Philos. Manuf. 381 Attendants on steam-going looms. 1845 S. Judd Margaret i. xvii. 171 A steam-like vapor arose from the frozen River. 1852 C. W. Hoskyns Talpa 183 A steam-driven cultivator can be brought to bear. 1868 F. H. Joynson Metals in Constr. 54 A steam-wrought hammer. a1884 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Suppl. 861/1 In Campbell & Pryor's method of steam heating for dwellings, the steam boiler and radiators are inclosed in a heating room in the cellar. 1885 G. Allen Babylon I. xiii. 276 This steam-ridden nineteenth century. 1890 Harper's Mag. Sept. 576/1 The Kents lived in a steam-heated flat. 1901 Scotsman 4 Sept. 7/8 Instead of a steam-driven train every two hours they might have an electrically-driven train every half-hour. 1911 Rep. Labour & Social Conditions in Germany III. vi–vii. 110 The rooms are steam-heated. 1917 S. Graham Priest of Ideal iv. 53 This mansion, with its good roof and closed windows and doors, and probably steam-heating to keep out the damp. 1934 Discovery Nov. 314/1 In 1934 the German railways made some striking accelerations in the schedules of their steam-hauled expresses. 1936 Discovery Nov. 357/1 Accelerations of steam-operated trains in Great Britain continues. 1946 Nature 5 Oct. 474/1 This at once prompted Rudall to examine the effect of 50 per cent urea on steam-set β-keratin. 1949 Sun (Baltimore) 14 Dec. 5/2 Already, automobile ‘laundries’ and firms that steam-clean buildings have been told to cease operation. 1956 Handbk. Hardwoods (Forest Products Res. Lab.) 2 Classification of timbers according to their steam-bending properties is..based mainly on the minimum bending radius of sound, clear specimens 1 in. thick at a moisture content of about 25 per cent. 1956 Amer. Speech 31 86 Advertisement of Adelaide Steam Cleaning Service. 1962 J. T. Marsh Self-smoothing Fabrics ix. 122 It is not necessary to employ a special chamber for curing, but only the usual steam-heated cylinders or a stenter. 1962 J. T. Marsh Self-smoothing Fabrics ii. 9 The steam-set fabric has a pleasant handle, and good crease recovery. 1966 A. W. Lewis Gloss. Woodworking Terms 106 Oak, Japanese..easier to work than European oak. Steam-bends excellently. 1973 Times 4 Oct. 24/5 The chair is demountable and consists of eight wooden staves..steam-bent into a soft, flowing outline. 1977 Mod. Railways Dec. 493/3 Steam-hauled excursions would be operated over this short length. 1978 Detroit Free Press 2 Apr. 2 f/4 The natives claim ‘the diggers’, which is even more impolite than calling them Aussies, come to this spectacular thermal display to get their suits steam-cleaned for free. b. Objective, as steam-raising. ΚΠ 1923 Engineering 26 Jan. 101/2 The boilers, furnaces..economisers, coal bunkers and other details of the steam-raising equipment are carried by the steel framework of the building. 1979 Improved Energy Efficiency (Shell Internat. Petroleum Co.) 5 Substantial savings are possible in steam-raising. C7. Special combinations: steam age n. the era when trains were drawn by steam locomotives; also, attributive or as adj. , belonging to this era; figurative out-of-date. ΘΚΠ society > travel > rail travel > [noun] > age of steam locomotives steam age1941 society > travel > rail travel > [adjective] > belonging to age of steam locomotives steam age1941 the world > time > relative time > the past > historical period > [noun] > other historical periods antiquityc1375 Christian antiquity1577 the days of ignorance1652 the time of ignorance1652 dark ages1656 Lower Empire1668 the age of reason1792 Scythism1793 grand siècle1811 the Age of Enlightenment1825 the Hundred Days1827 Tom and Jerry days1840 regency1841 industrial age1843 Régence1845 viking age1847 ignorance1867 renascence1868 Renaissance1872 gilded age1874 jazz era1919 jazz age1920 post-war1934 steam age1941 postcolonialism1955 information age1960 the world > time > relative time > the past > historical period > [adjective] > of other specific periods Georgian1745 romancean1804 early modern1817 federal1838 Jacobean1844 post-Reformation1850 pre-Reformation1855 postcolonial1861 post-Renaissance1874 post-conquest1880 post-conquestual1880 Jacobian1883 post-pyramidal1883 pre-industrial1883 early American1895 bow-and-arrow1899 palaeotechnic1904 Renaissancist1932 steam age1941 Carolinian1949 postcolonialist1957 the world > time > relative time > the past > oldness or ancientness > [adjective] > old-fashioned or antiquated moth-frettenOE antiquate?a1425 antique?1532 rusty1549 moth-eaten1551 musty1575 worm-eatenc1575 overyear1584 out of date1589 old-fashioned1592 out of date1592 worm-eat1597 old-fashion1599 ancient1601 outdated1616 out-of-fashion1623 over-aged1623 superannuateda1634 thorough-old1639 overdateda1641 trunk-hosea1643 antiquitated1645 antiquated1654 out-of-fashioned1671 unmodern1731 of the old school1749 auld-farrant1750 old-fangled1764 fossila1770 fogram1772 passé1775 unmodernized1775 oxidated1791 moss-covered1792 square-toeda1797 old-fashionable1807 pigtail1817 behind the times1826 slow1827 fossilized1828 rococo1836 antiquish1838 old-timey1850 out of season1850 moss-grown1851 old style1858 antiqued1859 pigtaily1859 prehistoric1859 backdated1862 played1864 fossiled1866 bygone1869 mossy-backed1870 old-worldly1878 past-time1889 outmoded1896 dated1900 brontosaurian1909 antiquey1926 horse-and-buggy1926 vintage1928 Neolithic1934 time-warped1938 demoded1941 steam age1941 hairy1946 old school1946 rinky-dink1946 time warp1954 Palaeolithic1957 retardataire1958 throwback1968 wally1969 antwacky1975 1941 W. H. Auden New Year Let. iii. 66 The genius of the loud Steam Age. 1961 Spectator 4 Aug. 181 The jet-age author gets the same sort of romance out of beaten-up old Dakotas..as steam-age Robert Louis Stevenson did from a schooner. 1978 W. Garner Möbius Trip (1979) i. i. 34 Suppose you're..a bullion dealer. You're not happy with your present security. It's a little bit steam age. steam beer n. a Californian effervescent beer. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > ale or beer > beer > [noun] > other kinds of beer spruce beerc1500 March beer1535 Lubecks beer1608 zythum1608 household beer1616 bottle1622 mumc1623 old beer1626 six1631 four1633 maize beer1663 mum beer1667 vinegar beer1677 wrest-beer1689 nog1693 October1705 October beer1707 ship-beer1707 butt beer1730 starting beer1735 butt1743 peterman1767 seamen's beer1795 chang1800 treacle beer1806 stock beer1826 Iceland beer1828 East India pale ale1835 India pale ale1837 faro1847 she-oak1848 Bass1849 bitter beer1850 bock1856 treble X1856 Burton1861 nettle beer1864 honey beer1867 pivo1873 Lambic1889 steam beer1898 barley-beer1901 gueuze1926 Kriek1936 best1938 rough1946 keg1949 IPA1953 busaa1967 mbege1972 microbrew1985 microbeer1986 yeast-beer- 1898 Western Brewer XXVIII. 278/1 Steam beer..is bottom fermenting... The steam beer mash is made according to the English downward mashing method. 1941 American Neptune Oct. 402 Claus Spreckels is the reputed inventor of the great San Francisco speciality, steam beer. 1959 San Francisco Chron. 28 June 1 There won't be a drop of steam beer in Northern California after a few more days. 1974 W. R. Hunt North of 53° xv. 102 Many saloons served the ‘choicest goods’ and steam beer at two bits a glass. steam-boiler n. a vessel in which water is heated to generate steam, esp. for working a steam-engine (boiler n. 2b). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > boiler > [noun] > types of steam-boiler1805 boiler1818 generator1823 wagon-boiler1837 Cornish boiler1840 saddle boiler1840 French boiler1844 vomiting-boiler1844 water-tube boiler1850 feed-heater1864 Scotch boiler1877 cross-tubea1884 steamer1891 flash generator1903 flash steam generator1907 waste-heat boiler1930 1805 R. W. Dickson Pract. Agric. I. 66 Steam-Boilers [for boiling meat]. 1815 Ann. Reg., Chron. 91 A new steam boiler, worked by what is called a pressure engine. 1847 Mechanics' Mag. 2 Jan. 23/2 Dr. Ritterbrandt's Process for Preventing the Incrustation of Steam-boilers. steam-bomb n. = candle-bomb n. at candle n. Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > equipment or apparatus > [noun] > general vessels > glass > others urinalc1300 recipient1558 matrass1591 tritory1660 balloon1678 proof-glass1765 air-bell1782 transfer-jar1827 ignition tube1874 beaker1877 bell-jar1877 flask1878 steam-bomb1895 Nessler tube1906 oxygen bottle1932 1895 Model Steam Eng. 14 Candle or Steam Bombs. steam calliope n. U.S. = steam-organ n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > keyboard instrument > types of organ > [noun] > steam organ steam-organ1795 calliope1856 steam calliope1868 1868 Daily Territorial Enterprise (Virginia City, Nevada) 29 Aug. 3/1 Even a steam calliope would not cause our firm nerves to tremble as vigorously as this worst of all combinations of unsweet tones. 1936 J. Dos Passos Big Money 164 The clanking roar of the rollercoaster and the steam-calliope. 1976 St. Louis (Missouri) Post-Dispatch 16 Sept. 1/2 A steam calliope is the ransom for the return of Nipper. steam-car n. a car driven or drawn by steam, e.g. a motor car worked by steam instead of petrol; U.S. a railway-carriage. ΘΚΠ society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [noun] > railway wagon or carriage rail wagon1824 railway wagon1824 wagon1825 car1826 railway car1828 railroad car1829 railcar1833 steam-car1833 road car1834 motor car1878 society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [noun] > railway wagon or carriage > carriage designed to carry passengers steam-carriage1788 railway carriage1824 carriage1825 railroad carriage1826 railroad car1829 railroad coach1829 rail carriage1831 coach1832 passenger car1832 steam-car1833 passenger carriage1838 passenger coach1841 day coach1869 bogie1919 clockwork orange1978 society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > [noun] > steam-powered > steam car steam-car1833 steamer1900 1833 Amer. Rail Road Jrnl. 2 225/2 The Steam Car accomplished the distance. 1836 Southern Lit. Messenger 2 762 The canal and the rail road, the steam boat and steam car, constitute in fact the great and characteristic powers of the age in which we live. 1875 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Steam-car, a car drawn by steam-power. 1877 Rep. Sel. Comm. Tramways 105 Steam cars might be very safely used, perhaps in Whitechapel. 1886 A. Winchell Walks & Talks in Geol. Field 11 There, in the distance, flies the train of steam-cars. 1888 J. Bryce Amer. Commonw. III. lxxxi. 69 When you meet them in the steam cars (i.e. on a railway journey). 1903 J. Fox Little Shepherd v. 65 ‘Steam cars!’ they cried. 1904 Indiana (Pa.) Evening Gaz. 14 Dec. 2/3 A De Dion steam car and a petrol bicycle. 1962 E. Lucia Klondike Kate 7 They clambered aboard..the steam cars. 1969 Listener 3 July 31/3 Mr Donald Healey, developer of Austin-Healey sports cars, is rumoured to be building..a 140 m.p.h. steam car... The current spate of steam-car development projects. ΘΚΠ society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [noun] > railway wagon or carriage > carriage designed to carry passengers steam-carriage1788 railway carriage1824 carriage1825 railroad carriage1826 railroad car1829 railroad coach1829 rail carriage1831 coach1832 passenger car1832 steam-car1833 passenger carriage1838 passenger coach1841 day coach1869 bogie1919 clockwork orange1978 society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > [noun] > steam-powered > steam wagon, -coach, or -carriage steam-chaise1769 steam-carriage1788 steam-wagon1821 steam-coach1825 locomobile1868 1788 in Ann. Rep. U.S. Commissioner Patents 1849: Arts & Manuf. (1850) (31st Congr., 1st Sess.: House of Representatives Executive Doc. No. 20, Pt. 1) 581 If any person..shall make..any elevator, hopper-boy, or any steam-carriage..without the consent of the said Oliver Evans. 1824 T. G. Cumming (title) Illustrations of the origin and progress of Rail and Tram Roads, and Steam Carriages, or locomotive Engines. 1831 Rep. Select Comm. Steam Carriages 17 in Parl. Papers (H.C. 324) VIII. 203 Are you [Mr. G. Gurney] the proprietor of a Steam Carriage used on public roads? 1844 Queen's Regulations & Orders Army 211 Officers thus circumstanced are likewise to proceed by Steam-Carriages upon Railroads. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > [noun] > steam-powered > steam wagon, -coach, or -carriage steam-chaise1769 steam-carriage1788 steam-wagon1821 steam-coach1825 locomobile1868 1769 Dr. Small in Muirhead Invent. Watt (1854) I. 52 A linen-draper at London, one Moore, has taken out a patent for moving wheel~carriages by steam... However, if you will come hither soon, I will..buy a steam-chaise of you and not of Moore. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > [noun] > steam-powered > steam wagon, -coach, or -carriage steam-chaise1769 steam-carriage1788 steam-wagon1821 steam-coach1825 locomobile1868 1825 ‘J. Nicholson’ Operative Mechanic 661 A steam-coach for the conveyance of passengers [on a railroad]. 1828 Sporting Mag. 21 267 I hear it is intended in good earnest to start a steam-coach from London to Southampton. 1834 L. Ritchie Wanderings by Seine 177 We saw a steam-coach which had stopped at the door of the public house. steam-coal n. coal suitable for heating water in steam-boilers. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > coal or types of coal > [noun] coal1253 sea-coal1253 pit-coal1483 cannel1541 earth coala1552 horse coal1552 Newcastle coal1552 stone-coal1585 cannel coal1587 parrot1594 burn-coal1597 lithanthrax1612 stony coal1617 Welsh coala1618 land-coala1661 foot coal1665 peacock coal1686 rough coal1686 white coal1686 heathen-coalc1697 coal-stone1708 round1708 stone-coal1708 bench-coal1712 slipper coal1712 black coal1713 culm1742 rock coal1750 board coal1761 Bovey coal1761 house coal1784 mineral coal1785 splint1789 splint coal1789 jet coal1794 anthracite1797 wood-coal1799 blind-coal1802 black diamond1803 silk-coal1803 glance-coal1805 lignite1808 Welsh stone-coal1808 soft1811 spout coals1821 spouter1821 Wallsend1821 brown coal1833 paper coal1833 steam-coal1850 peat-coal1851 cherry-coal1853 household1854 sinter coal1854 oil coal1856 raker1857 Kilkenny coal1861 Pottery coal1867 silkstone1867 block coal1871 admiralty1877 rattlejack1877 bunker1883 fusain1883 smitham1883 bunker coal1885 triping1886 trolley coal1890 kibble1891 sea-borne1892 jet1893 steam1897 sack coal1898 Welsh1898 navigation coal1900 Coalite1906 clarain1919 durain1919 vitrain1919 single1921 kolm1930 hards1956 1850 D. T. Ansted Elem. Course Geol. 414 There is a third..condition of coal now known as ‘steam-coal’, and admirably adapted for the use of the steam-navy. 1883 W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining 238 The finest steam coals of South Wales are moderately hard and almost smokeless. steam-colour n. Calico-printing a colour developed and fixed in the cloth by steaming. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > colour > colouring > colouring matter > [noun] > dye > fast dye grain1377 grain-colour1632 steam-colour1844 1844 E. A. Parnell's Appl. Chem. I. 368 Steam colours. steam cracking n. the thermal cracking of petroleum using steam as an inert diluent which reduces polymerization and increases the yield of olefins. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > oil refining or separating processes > [noun] re-refining1864 cracking1868 stripping1922 sweetening1924 Platforming1949 Powerforming1956 steam cracking1959 1959 Petroleum Times 25 Sept. 602/1 No. 3 olefine plant is..based on the steam cracking process. 1962 Murphree & Ciprios in Mod. Petroleum Technol. (ed. 3) ix. 318 Although the primary purpose of steam cracking is the production of light hydrocarbons, the process also produces material in the gasoline boiling range. 1977 Shell in Base Chemicals (Shell Internat. Petroleum Co.) 4 Benzene, toluene and mixed xylenes coming from oil are extracted in special plants from reformate and pyrolysis gasoline, formed when lower olefins are manufactured by the steam-cracking of liquid feedstocks. steam-cracked adj. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > extracted or refined oil > [adjective] > refined or distilled mineral oil cracked1884 wide-cut1888 stripped1931 re-refined1932 steam-cracked1962 1962 Murphree & Ciprios in Mod. Petroleum Technol. (ed. 3) ix. 318 The octane number of this steam-cracked naphtha ranges from about 80 to 100 research method (unleaded). steam cracker n. an installation for this process. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > workplace > places for working with specific materials > place for working with oil or gas > [noun] > oil refinery > apparatus for converting to petrol > for breaking it into simpler molecules cracker1951 hydro-cracker1965 steam cracker1968 1968 Economist 2 Nov. 73/1 When finished, the plant will include a new steam cracker, with a production capacity of 340,000 tons a year of ethylene, 200,000 tons of propylene, [etc.]. steam curing n. the curing or hardening of a material by treatment with steam. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > manufacturing processes > [noun] > processing > other processes ripping1463 intinction1559 sweat1573 inceration1612 rasion1617 lixiviation1664 scribing1679 beating1687 bushing1794 refinishing1842 grading1852 conditioning1858 ripening1860 scutching1861 retreatment1867 chamber process1869 installation1882 tanking1891 fobbing1898 steam curing1907 sieve analysis1928 mulling1931 linishing1945 1907 Engin. News 5 Sept. 249/1 (heading) Effect of steam curing on the crushing strength of concrete. 1921 W. K. Hatt & W. Voss Concrete Work I. viii. 181 Steam curing is accomplished in curing tunnels with a roof of such a shape that it will drain the condensed moisture to the sides of the tunnel. 1967 M. Chandler Ceramics in Mod. World iv. 128 The whole assembly is..put into a steam-curing cabinet. steam-cure v. (transitive) . ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > industry > manufacturing processes > perform general or industrial manufacturing processes [verb (transitive)] > other processes cure1633 scribe1678 refinish1820 retort1850 prick1872 supple1876 whizz1882 steam-cure1910 linish1971 1910 Cement Era VIII. 169/1 Blocks of 1 part cement to 8 parts sand and [sic] steam cured at 80 pounds pressure showed a crusting strength of 2,100 pounds per square inch. 1962 J. T. Marsh Self-smoothing Fabrics xi. 177 It sometimes happens that, with cotton goods which have been steam-cured, the crease recovery is very slightly below that obtained in an atmosphere free from steam. steam-cured adj. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > materials having undergone process > [adjective] > having undergone other processes alumed1574 splinted1616 scribed1678 cold-drawn1716 droved1754 cool-drawn1774 swaged1842 spliced1859 chiselled1873 steam-cured1909 refinished1910 precast1914 fibrillated1929 plasticized1937 foamed1943 1909 Chem. Abstr. 3 1210 Steam-cured blocks may be made all winter. 1962 J. T. Marsh Self-smoothing Fabrics xi. 176 It was possible to show a linear relation between the improvement in resistance to abrasion of steam-cured fabrics over dry-cured fabrics and the amount of steam present. steam distillation n. Physical Chemistry distillation of a liquid in a current of steam, used esp. to purify at temperatures below their normal boiling points liquids that are not very volatile and are immiscible with water. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > chemical reactions or processes > [noun] > chemical reactions or processes (named) > distillation > steam distillation steam distillation1904 1904 Analyst XXIX. 385 (heading) Laboratory apparatus for steam distillation. 1954 Thorpe's Dict. Appl. Chem. (ed. 4) XI. 85/2 The chief advantage offered by steam distillation is that a substance of fairly low volatility can be separated from non-volatile impurities at a temperature much below its normal boiling-point. 1972 P. R. S. Murray Princ. Org. Chem. ix. 58 Steam distillation is most effective when one of the components to be separated..has a high molecular weight. steam-distil v. [as a back-formation] (transitive and intransitive) . ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > chemical reactions or processes > undergo chemical reactions or processes [verb (intransitive)] > undergo chemical reactions or processes (named) > undergo distillation > specific steam distillation steam-distil1923 the world > matter > chemistry > chemical reactions or processes > subject to chemical reactions or processes [verb (transitive)] > subject to named chemical reaction or process > subject to distillation > subject to steam distillation steam-distil1923 1923 W. M. Cumming et al. Systematic Org. Chem. ii. 24 When the liquid to be steam-distilled is lighter than water, the small glass tube E is extended to the bottom of the receiver. 1964 Oceanogr. & Marine Biol. 2 152 The compound is reduced to trimethylamine with tiCl3, which is then steam-distilled into an excess of standardized acid. 1974 Rosser & Williams Mod. Org. Chem. for ‘A’ Level xiii. 253 If care is not taken to dry organic liquids thoroughly, the water/liquid mixture will often steam-distil over at a temperature lower than the actual boiling point of the pure liquid. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun] > advocating specific treatments > water treatment water doctor1736 steam-doctor1830 water-curer1840 hydropath1842 hydriatrist1843 hydropathist1847 balneologist1872 1830 Cincinnati Chron. 6 Feb. 2/3 The Mayor was induced..to issue his warrant for the apprehension of a black man calling himself Caesar Gimsoun, and practising in this city as a steam doctor. 1833 J. Neal Down-easters I. 15 Never hearn tell o' the rain water doctor? some calls him the screw-augur doctor, and some the steam-doctor. 1853 R. Dunglison Med. Lexicon (ed. 9) Steam-doctor, a term applied to one who treats all or most diseases by steam. 1860 J. R. Bartlett Dict. Americanisms (ed. 3) Thompsonian Doctor, a physician who follows the Thompsonian practice; also called Steam Doctor. Thompsonian Practice, a peculiar treatment of diseases. steam-drive n. the supplying of motive power by means of steam. ΚΠ 1910 Chambers's Jrnl. 751/2 We had no steam-power available to drive the winding-rollers... A few days later we succeeded in rigging up an old, primitive system of steam-drive which enabled us to get up a greater speed on the band. steam-eater n. colloquial an engine or apparatus which consumes a great amount of heated steam either on account of its size or through waste. ΚΠ 1900 Jrnl. Inst. Electr. Engineers 29 581 These pumps are the worst steam-eaters in the ship. steamfitter n. one who installs the pipes of a steam-heating system; a steam-heating engineer. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > utility service workers > [noun] > pipe-layer or -fitter piper1456 pipelayer1818 pipe-fitter1860 pipeman1863 steamfitter1906 1906 Daily Colonist (Victoria, Brit. Columbia) 12 Jan. 7/7 (advt.) To plumbers, steam fitters etc. We have just received two carloads of iron pipes in all sizes. 1977 J. Crosby Company of Friends xvii. 114 They both laughed…talking about the problems of the trade like steamfitters discussing occupational hazards. steam fly n. the small brown cockroach, Blattella germanica, commonly found in kitchens and bathrooms. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Dictyoptera > member of genus Blatta (cockroach) > blattella germanica (steam fly) German cockroach1846 steam fly1933 1933 M. Lowry Ultramarine iv. 184 ‘You shuffle them—’ ‘—King of the steam-flies, eh—’. 1944 Jrnl. Royal Army Med. Corps 83 188 The steam fly or German cockroach. 1962 New Scientist 11 Oct. 75/1 The German cockroach, commonly referred to as ‘the steam fly’, is dark brown to tan in colour and is also very widely distributed. steam heat n. heat produced by steam; now spec. (the heat produced by) a steam-generating central heating system, used in passenger trains and buildings; hence steam heater, steam heating. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > [noun] > heat produced by specific means sand-heat1612 steam heat1825 wobble-heat1899 the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > heating or making hot > that which or one who heats > [noun] > a device for heating or warming > heater using steam steam radiator1725 steam heatera1884 pressure heater1893 1825 J. M. Good Study Med. (ed. 2) II. 543 The extract of hemlock or of hyoscyamus, prepared in a steam-heat. a1884 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Suppl. 861/1 Steam Heater,..a low pressure steam-heating apparatus. 1904 Railway Mag. 14 169/2 Since the general introduction of steam-heat..it appears to be an easy matter for the guard to simply turn a valve to supply sufficient steam to heat the cars comfortably. 1941 J. Masefield In Mill 36 The winter steam-heat made it impossible to wear a coat while at work. 1967 G. F. Fiennes I tried to run Railway ii. 7 The second [mistake was] to report myself for pulling off the steam-heater pipe. 1974 Times 1 Apr. 14/5 Hugh Lawson, deputy city engineer of Nottingham, gave a speedy talk on his city's steam-heat system. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > [noun] > steam-powered > traction engine steam-horse1815 puffer1849 traction-engine1859 1815 J. von Baader Specif. Patent 3959 7 Those complicated..machines called locomotive engines or steam horses. 1855 Pract. Mechanic's Jrnl. Sept. 139 Mr. Boydell's ‘steam horse,’ or ‘traction engine,’ was put upon the brake in order to test its power. steam-iron n. an electric iron containing water which is heated and emitted as steam from its flat surface to assist in the pressing of clothes. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > washing > washing clothes and textile articles > [noun] > pressing or ironing > ironing or pressing implements pressing iron1343 cold press1552 setting-stick?1578 putter1583 putting stick1583 poking-stick1592 pooter1596 poting stick1600 poker1604 goose1606 poking-iron?1606 iron1613 smoothing-iron1627 steel1638 box iron1640 smoothing-boxa1684 press iron1695 ironing board1721 sad iron1759 ironing blanket1774 ironing table1778 flat-iron1810 sleeve-board1826 ironer1833 Italian iron1833 press-board1849 ironing machine1851 goffering-iron1861 skirt-board1861 goffer1865 trouser press1880 ironing board cover1886 trouser presser1888 electric iron1890 press cloth1918 press-pad1924 tie press1926 steam-iron1951 pressing board1969 1951 Good Housek. Home Encycl. 154/2 Electronic steam irons are now available, but..are not always so effective as they might appear. 1962 Which? Sept. 270/1 If you want to avoid using a damp cloth or damping the clothes, then your choice may well be a steam iron. 1972 Guardian 30 Aug. 9/5 The opening for filling steam irons with distilled water is usually mingy, and the thing overflows. steam-jacket n. a jacket or casing filled with steam in order to preserve the heat of the vessel round which it is placed. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > [noun] > parts of helm1663 spring-beam?1794 steam-jacket1838 cut-off1849 steam-jacketing1870 starting block1881 timing chain1889 timing mark1901 decelerator1907 air drain1908 plenum chamber1908 reservoir1920 1838 Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 1 139/2 The best engines in Cornwall have the steam jackets supplied from a pipe communicating directly with the boiler. 1883 R. Haldane Workshop Receipts 2nd Ser. 35/1 Wrought-iron cylinders..provided with a steam-jacket to control their temperatures. steam-jacketed adj. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > [adjective] > other qualities or attributes bell-mouthed1797 reverse1839 throttled1850 reversible1852 steam-jacketed1876 multi-cylindera1884 multiple-cylinder1888 four-cycle1909 multi-cylindered1909 knockless1928 throttleable1951 multi-fuel1957 stretched1960 multi-fuelled1964 1876 S. Kens. Mus. Catalog. No. 2152 The cylinders of the engines are steam jacketed. 1904 Windsor Mag. Jan. 275/1 Six steam-jacketed boilers. steam-jacketing n. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > [noun] > parts of helm1663 spring-beam?1794 steam-jacket1838 cut-off1849 steam-jacketing1870 starting block1881 timing chain1889 timing mark1901 decelerator1907 air drain1908 plenum chamber1908 reservoir1920 1870 Jrnl. Franklin Inst. 89 21 In a paper upon steam jacketting. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medical appliances or equipment > other medical equipment > [noun] > kettle croup-kettlea1884 bronchitis kettle1886 steam-kettle1890 1890 F. Taylor Man. Pract. Med. (1891) 356 In the intervals, the largyngitis is to be treated by a moist warm atmosphere (steam-kettle) and mild opiates as in other cases. steam line n. a line in a phase diagram representing the conditions of temperature and pressure at which water and water vapour are in equilibrium in the absence of ice. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > physical chemistry > phases > [noun] > diagram > line on steam line1879 liquidus1901 tie-line1924 1879 Encycl. Brit. VIII. 731/2 At this point the steam line, ice line, and hoar-frost line intersect, and it has therefore been called the triple point. 1937 M. W. Zemansky Heat & Thermodynamics xi. 175 In the particular case of water..the vaporization curve is called the steam line. steam-navvy n. a machine for digging or excavating by steam. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > earth-moving and excavating equipment > [noun] > excavator steam shovel1801 steam trowel1801 excavator1843 earthmover1871 navvy1877 steam-navvy1881 backhoe1928 Traxcavator1940 back-acter1957 1881 Spons' Dict. Engin. Suppl. III. 1107 A steam navvy..consisting of a rectangular truck, supported on four wheels, carrying the engine and boiler. Categories » steam nigger n. U.S. the long cylinder with piston and rod by which the log is forced up to the saw in a sawing mill. steam-organ n. = calliope n. 1. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > keyboard instrument > types of organ > [noun] > steam organ steam-organ1795 calliope1856 steam calliope1868 1795 W. Mason Ess. Eng. Church Music i. 36 And who knows but a certain noble Mechanic..may place a Steam Organ upon the Poop and play ça ira upon it. 1841 Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 4 247 M. Lax, jun., has just invented a steam organ, which can be heard through the extent of a whole province. 1910 ‘I. Hay’ in Granta 11 June 12 Even the steam organs seemed to have stopped of their own accord. 1962 L. Davidson Rose of Tibet vi. 106 It was as though he had been pushed into a steam organ at a fair. The stupefying blare of sound. steam-owner n. an owner of steamships. ΚΠ 1899 C. J. C. Hyne Further Adventures Capt. Kettle vi Why, sir, you've been a steam-owner in your time. steam-pocket n. ‘a place below the water-level of a boiler where steam accumulates or is formed and does not pass away quickly’ (Cent. D. Suppl. 1909). steam-pocketing n. ΚΠ 1910 Chambers's Jrnl. 60/2 The steam has the greatest facility for its escape from the tubes without any signs of steam-pocketing, which is a serious evil in this class of steam-raiser. steam point n. (a) a temperature at which liquid water and water vapour are in equilibrium; spec. the boiling point of water under standard atmospheric pressure; (b) North American a metal pipe which is driven into frozen earth and down which steam can be passed in order to thaw the ground for mining. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > mining equipment > [noun] > other mining equipment dial1681 stick1708 motty1797 nail1839 spiking crib or curb1839 spile1841 bull1849 dag1863 ore bin1867 monitor1873 Billy Fairplay1876 snibble1883 brattice-cloth1885 breaker1885 steam point1895 picking belt1900 self-rescuer1924 rock duster1930 walking dragline1930 the world > matter > chemistry > physical chemistry > phases > [noun] > steam point steam point1895 1895 Jrnl. Chem. Soc. 67 196 It is absolutely necessary that the surface of the pyrometer should be free from all soluble salts when the steam point is being taken. 1903 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) A. 200 122 The observed pressure at the steam-point. 1909 Yukon Territory (Canada Dept. Interior) iv. 38 A steam point is an iron pipe of about 5½ feet in length,..connected to a boiler supplying the steam... The miner drives the steam point into the ground, where it is left..until a hole is thawed. 1965 Jrnl. Chem. Physics 42 274/2 In 1954 the size of the Kelvin degree was fixed by assigning the value 273·16°K to the triple point of water, so that the value of the steam point is now subject to experimental determination. 1974 W. R. Hunt North of 53° iv. 15 Steam points replaced wood fires for thawing and this greatly speeded the mining work. steam radio n. colloquial name for sound radio, considered outmoded by television; hence, a radio receiver. ΘΚΠ society > communication > broadcasting > radio broadcasting > [noun] radio1907 wireless1922 the spoken word1940 sound1949 steam radio1957 steam1959 society > communication > broadcasting > radio broadcasting > [noun] > radio set portable1900 wireless set1907 wireless1909 crystal receiver1910 radio1912 radio set1912 box1916 crystal set1921 crystal radio1922 receiver1930 car radio1931 clock radio1946 transistor set1953 transistor radio1956 steam radio1957 transistor1961 tranny1969 Casseiver1976 1957 V. Gielgud Brit. Radio Drama 1922–56 The flight from ‘steam-radio’ to television has become an admitted rout. 1961 Radio Times 6 Apr. 41/4 I am the proud possessor of ‘square eyeballs’, but still feel that the good old ‘steam’ radio has a winner in the Scrapbook series. 1976 J. Snow Cricket Rebel 7 Overseas tours were followed equally avidly on the old ‘steam’ radio in the lounge. steam-raiser n. (a) a steam-engine; (b) a person employed in an engine shed to light the fires of locomotives and raise steam. ΘΚΠ society > travel > rail travel > railway worker > [noun] > one who raises steam steam-raiser1910 1910 Chambers's Jrnl. 60/2 The steam has the greatest facility for its escape from the tubes without any signs of steam-pocketing, which is a serious evil in this class of steam-raiser. 1925 W. Paterson & H. Webster Man. Locomotive Running Shed Managem. viii. 114 The usual method is for the steam raiser to ‘line’ the grate along the firebox sides and well into the corners with coal, leaving the centre of the grate bare. 1947 H. Webster Locomotive Running Shed Pract. 177 Following an interval of 30 minutes or so the fire is inspected by the steam-raiser who breaks it up and adds fresh fuel. steam-road n. a road prepared for steam-traction; U.S. a railroad. ΘΚΠ society > travel > rail travel > railway system or organization > [noun] > a railway > for steam-trains steam railway1812 steam-road1837 society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > road > [noun] > for wheeled vehicles > for steam traction steam-road1837 1837 W. B. Adams Eng. Pleasure Carriages 291 To make a steam-road is more costly than an animal road, because it imperatively requires a more exact level. 1911 H. S. Harrison Queed xv. 174 The cars are steam-road size. steam-room n. (a) steam-space n. below; (b) U.S. a vapour bath. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > boiler > [noun] > parts of > compartments fireplace1611 firebox1735 fire chamber1808 water space1824 water pocket1863 steam-space1867 steam-room1875 1875 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Steam-room, the capacity for steam over the surface of the water in the boiler. 1972 Village Voice (N.Y.) 1 June 73/1 A steamroom in which vapors rise and good men fall. steam-space n. the space above the water-level in a steam-boiler. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > boiler > [noun] > parts of > compartments fireplace1611 firebox1735 fire chamber1808 water space1824 water pocket1863 steam-space1867 steam-room1875 1867–72 N. P. Burgh Mod. Marine Engin. 371/2 Lowness of the steam space above the water line in the boiler. steam table n. U.S. a table in a cafeteria, etc., slotted to hold containers of cooked food kept hot by steam circulating beneath them. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > equipment for food preparation > stove or cooker > [noun] > food warmer Mary's bath1600 Saint Mary's bath1612 water plate1721 hot closet1798 water bath1806 bain-marie1822 hotplate1861 steam table1861 rechaud1906 pap-warmer1920 warming oven1950 veilleuse1955 warming drawer1972 1861 C. E. Francatelli Cook's Guide 3 (advt.) Smoke Jacks, Hot Plates,.., Steam Tables, and..other description of..Cooking Apparatus. 1944 S. Bellow Dangling Man 32 I looked around at the steam tables and the posters of foundering ships. 1976 M. Machlin Pipeline xiii. 154 Next to the sandwiches was a steam table with several containers of soggy-looking breaded veal cutlets. steam-tent n. a tent used in the treatment of laryngeal and pulmonary disease. ΚΠ 1892 J. Carmichael Disease in Children 238 The patient [is] put to bed in a steam tent. steam-tight adj. tight enough to resist the ingress or egress of steam; also quasi-adv. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > closed or shut condition > [adjective] > stopping up or blocking > without leak or tight > specific watertight1489 wind-tight1507 wind and water tighta1550 weatherproof1647 weather-tight1648 wind-fast1648 airtight1728 steam-tight1765 waterproofed1813 gas-tight1819 acid-proof1844 gas-proof1846 oil-tight1847 mudproof1897 pressure-tight1899 draught-proof1908 weather-stripped1908 spill-proof1920 vacuum-tight1927 splash-proof1929 vapour-proof1946 1765 Watt in Muirhead Invent. Watt (1854) I. 8 I..have not got the piston steam-tight yet. 1856 Dempsey Locomotive Eng. 40 The passage is closed completely steam-tight. 1892 D. A. Low Introd. Machine Drawing 118 A steam-tight joint. steam-tug n. a steam-boat specially constructed for towing vessels; †applied jocularly to a railway-engine. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > vessels with other specific uses > [noun] > tug tow-boat1815 tracker1817 tug1817 tug-boat1832 towing-vessel1834 steam-tug1835 tug-steamer1861 tow1874 pusher tug1936 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > mechanically propelled vessels > [noun] > propelled by steam engine > other steam vessels steam dredger1801 steam barge1812 steam hopper1812 steam-launch1812 steam schooner1812 steam-yacht1812 steam-tug1835 pleasure steamer1839 tug-steamer1861 ditcher1877 alligator1884 turnabout1885 tank-steamer1889 whaleback1891 whalebacker1891 1835 F. Marryat Olla Podrida vi, in Metrop. Mag. Three steam tugs, whose names are the Stephenson, the Arrow, and the Elephant, are to drag to Malines..all his majesty's ministers. 1891 R. Kipling Light that Failed viii. 157 A steam-tug on the river hooted as she towed her barges to wharf. steam-tug murmur n. Pathology (see quot.). ΚΠ 1901 W. A. N. Dorland Illustr. Med. Dict. (ed. 2) Steam-tug murmur, a murmur heard in aortic obstruction and insufficiency, and resembling the sound of the exhaust of a steam-tug. steam turbine n. see turbine n. b. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > [noun] > steam-powered > steam wagon, -coach, or -carriage steam-chaise1769 steam-carriage1788 steam-wagon1821 steam-coach1825 locomobile1868 1821 T. Gray Observ. Iron Rail-way (ed. 2) 5 Conveyance of all merchandise as well as persons, by steam waggons and coaches. a1876 M. Collins Pen Sketches (1879) I. 245 This perturbed period of the steam-wagon and the lightning-wire. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > steam engine > [noun] > types of fire waterwork1663 steam-wheel1797 Cornish engine1840 beam-engine1844 machine-whim1848 screw engine1852 donkey-engine1858 quadruple expansion1861 tandem engine1878 uniflow1971 1797 Encycl. Brit. XVII. 744/1 A project of a steam-wheel, where the impulsive force of the vapour was employed. a1822 P. B. Shelley Let. to — in Posthumous Poems (1824) 62 The self-impelling steam-wheels of the mind. 1841 S. C. Brees Gloss. Civil Engin. 218 Rotary, Rotatory, or Concentric Engine (sometimes called a steam-wheel). Draft additions March 2003 steampunk n. [after cyberpunk n.; compare steam age n. at Compounds 7] Science Fiction a writer of science fiction which has a historical setting (esp. based on industrialized, nineteenth-century society) and characteristically features steam-powered, mechanized machinery rather than electronic technology; (also) such writing as a subgenre of science fiction. ΚΠ 1987 K. W. Jeter in Locus Apr. 57/2 I think Victorian fantasies are going to be the next big thing, as long as we can come up with a fitting collective term for Powers, Blaylock and myself. Something based on the appropriate technology of the era; like ‘steam-punks’, perhaps. 1990 CU Amiga Apr. 66/3 Anyone acquainted with CU should be familiar with the concept of cyberspace by now—but steampunk is the next progression. 1999 Entertainm. Weekly (Electronic ed.) 8 Oct. The imaginative ‘steampunk’ concept eventually bubbled up to movies like Wild Wild West. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1916; most recently modified version published online June 2022). steamv. I. intransitive. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > [verb (intransitive)] stinkc725 steamOE smellc1175 smakec1315 savoura1400 taragec1407 flavourc1425 scentc1460 breathea1500 smell1526 OE Phoenix 213 Wyrta wearmiað, willsele stymeð swetum swæccum, þonne on swole byrneð þurh fyres feng fugelmid neste. c1000 Ælfric Lives Saints xxvii. 110 Wynsum bræð stemde of þære halgan rode. 1667 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 2 547 Laying open the hollow of the Thorax, there steam'd out at first a very offensive smell. 1847 W. H. Prescott Hist. Conquest Peru I. iii. vi. 448 They found themselves in a small and obscure apartment..from the floor and sides of which steamed up the most offensive odors, like those of a slaughter-house. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > burning > fire or flame > become fire [verb (intransitive)] > blaze or flame blaze?c1225 flame1377 lowec1400 steamc1405 flamble1557 aflamec1623 blazen1716 c1405 (c1387–95) G. Chaucer Canterbury Tales Prol. (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 202 Hise eyen stepe, and rollynge in his heed That stemed as a fourneys of a leed. c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 473/2 Stemyn, or lowyn vp, flammo. 3. a. Of vapour, etc.: To be emitted or exhaled; to rise or issue in the form of steam. Also with away, up, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > gas > [verb (intransitive)] > of vapour, etc.: be emitted, rise, or pass off to stand upc1300 risea1382 exhalec1400 steam1582 fume1594 suffumigate1599 emanate1818 off-gas1979 1582 R. Stanyhurst tr. Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis iii. 50 And smoak swift steamd to the skyward. 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. xii. sig. L7 When the last deadly smoke aloft did steeme. 1661 R. Boyle Two Ess. Unsuccessfulness Exper. i, in Certain Physiol. Ess. 58 The dissolved Amber..swimming like a thin film upon the surface of the Liquour, whence little by little it steamed away into the air. 1683 A. Snape Anat. Horse i. xxvi. 55 From which Seed a certain air or spirit steams through the Trumpets to the Testicles. 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics ii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 85 The Water..thus imbib'd, returns in misty Dews, And steaming up, the rising Plant renews. View more context for this quotation 1699 J. Pomfret Love Triumphant 166 The Water round it gave a Nauseous Smell, Like Vapours Steeming from a Sulph'rous Cell. 1820 P. B. Shelley Sensitive Plant in Prometheus Unbound 171 Then there steamed up a freezing dew. 1859 C. Dickens Tale of Two Cities i. ii. 3 The reek of the labouring horses steamed into it. b. figurative. ΚΠ 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene iii. i. sig. Cc4v Which she misconstruing, thereby esteemd That from like inward fire that outward smoke had steemd. 1692 E. Walker tr. Epictetus Enchiridion x A waking Dream, Such as from ill-digested Thoughts doth steam. 1842 Ld. Tennyson Lotos-eaters: Choric Song (rev. ed.) viii, in Poems (new ed.) I. 184 They find a music centred in a doleful song Steaming up, a lamentation and an ancient tale of wrong. 4. To emit, give off, exhale steam or vapour. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > gas > [verb (intransitive)] > emit fumes or vapour breathec1300 fume?1533 vapour1552 steam1614 vaporate1623 rokea1700 smoke1733 outgas1962 off-gas1979 1614 A. Gorges tr. Lucan Pharsalia vii. 285 The swords are cold on Pompeys part But Cæsars steeme in bloody mart. 1667 J. Dryden Indian Emperour iii. iii. 36 See, see, my Brother's Ghost hangs hovering there, O're his warm Blood, that steems into the Air. 1708 J. Philips Cyder ii. 140 Nor let the crude Humors dance In heated Brass, steaming with Fire intense. 1820 W. Scott Monastery III. xii. 319 Censers steaming with incense. 1842 C. Dickens Amer. Notes II. i. 41 Several damp gentlemen, whose clothes, on their drawing round the stove, began to steam again. 1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps i. xxvii. 206 The glacier..steaming under the influence of the sun. 1864 C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend (1865) I. i. v. 42 On the hob, a kettle steamed. 1913 Eng. Rev. Apr. 45 My eye glanced at the laboratory where the madder-vats were steaming. 5. Of a surface: To become covered or bedewed with condensed vapour. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > liquid > moisture or humidity > be or become humid [verb (intransitive)] > fall or be deposited as condensed vapour > on or of a surface eve1777 steam1892 1892 Photogr. Ann. II. p. cxlvii Ventilation Apertures to prevent Condensing Lenses steaming during exhibition. 6. To generate or produce steam for mechanical purposes: said of an engine or boiler. to steam up, to turn on steam or set it working; hence figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > undertaking > beginning action or activity > begin action or activity [verb (intransitive)] beginc1000 onginOE aginOE ginc1175 to go tillc1175 to take onc1175 comsea1225 fanga1225 to go toc1275 i-ginc1275 commencec1320 to get (also get down, go, go adown, set, set down) to workc1400 to lay to one's hand(sc1405 to put to one's hand (also hands)c1410 to set toc1425 standa1450 to make to1563 to fall to it1570 to start out1574 to fall to1577 to run upon ——1581 to break off1591 start1607 to set in1608 to set to one's hands1611 to put toa1616 to fall ona1625 in1633 to fall aboard1642 auspicatea1670 to set out1693 to enter (into) the fray1698 open1708 to start in1737 inchoate1767 to set off1774 go1780 start1785 to on with1843 to kick off1857 to start in on1859 to steam up1860 to push off1909 to cut loose1923 to get (also put) the show on the road1941 to get one's arse in gear1948 the mind > emotion > excitement > nervous excitement > cause nervous excitement or agitate [verb (transitive)] to carry away?1529 agitate1591 fermentate1599 tumultuate1616 alarm1620 overwork1645 uncalm1650 flutter1664 pother1692 to set afloata1713 fluctuate1788 fuss1816 tumult1819 to break up1825 rile1857 to steam up1860 to shake up1884 the mind > emotion > anger > [verb (transitive)] > make angry wrethec900 abelgheeOE abaeileOE teenOE i-wrathec1075 wratha1200 awratha1250 gramec1275 forthcalla1300 excitea1340 grieve1362 movea1382 achafea1400 craba1400 angerc1400 mada1425 provokec1425 forwrecchec1450 wrothc1450 arage1470 incensea1513 puff1526 angry1530 despite1530 exasperate1534 exasper1545 stunt1583 pepper1599 enfever1647 nanger1675 to put or set up the back1728 roil1742 outrage1818 to put a person's monkey up1833 to get one's back up1840 to bring one's nap up1843 rouse1843 to get a person's shirt out1844 heat1855 to steam up1860 to get one's rag out1862 steam1922 to burn up1923 to flip out1964 society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > steam engine > operate steam engine [verb (intransitive)] > of engine: produce steam steam1860 the mind > emotion > excitement > exciting > excite [verb (transitive)] astirc1000 stir?c1225 araisec1374 entalentc1374 flamec1380 reara1382 raisec1384 commove1393 kindlea1400 fluster1422 esmove1474 talent1486 heavec1540 erect?1555 inflame1560 to set on gog1560 yark1565 tickle1567 flesh1573 concitate1574 rouse1574 warmc1580 agitate1587 spirit1598 suscitate1598 fermentate1599 nettle1599 startle1602 worka1616 exagitate1621 foment1621 flush1633 exacuatea1637 ferment1667 to work up1681 pique1697 electrify1748 rattle1781 pump1791 to touch up1796 excite1821 to key up1835 to steam up1909 jazz1916 steam1922 volt1930 whee1949 to fire up1976 geek1984 1860 What shall I be? (U.S.A.) 95 Not so fast, Mr. Spit~fire; You needn't steam up so fast. I'm as good company as you'll find here. 1877 M. Reynolds Locom. Engine Driving 88 Some engines steam best with a low fire. 1897 Pall Mall Mag. Sept. 81 The engines steam splendidly, and haul without assistance a train of 250 tons. 1909 Webster's New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. Steam v.i...4. To generate steam; as, the boiler steams well. 7. To move or travel by the agency of steam: a. of a ship or its passengers. Also to steam it. Also with adverbs, as away. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > [verb (intransitive)] > in specific type of craft to barge it1599 boat?1630 canoe1732 shallop1737 raft1741 scow1749 steam1832 yacht1836 screw1840 steamer1866 gondole1874 kayak1875 sail1898 tramp1899 motor-boat1903 barge1909 hover1962 power1964 motor1968 jet-ski1978 society > travel > travel by water > action or motion of vessel > [verb (intransitive)] > make progress > by types of mechanical propulsion puff?c1225 sternwheel1807 paddle1827 steam1832 screw1840 1832 F. Trollope Domest. Manners Amer. (ed. 2) I. xvii. 259 Even were all the parties strangers to each other [on long river excursions], the knowledge that they were to eat, to drink, and steam away together for a week or fortnight, would induce something like a social feeling in any other country. 1832 R. H. Froude Remains (1838) I. 306 We shall..see Avignon and Nismes, and then steam it up the Rhone to Lyons. 1837 Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 1 28/1 She [a ship] will either steam or sail. 1844 W. H. Maxwell Wanderings in Highlands & Islands I. ii. 58 Every mile we steamed, the lake assumed a new character. 1878 W. H. G. Kingston Three Admirals xix. 437 The Bellona accordingly steamed on towards the entrance of the harbour. 1886 Law Times Rep. 53 726/1 When the tug was completed it was found that she could only steam ten or eleven knots an hour. 1888 Poor Nellie 388 The young lady had steamed over from America. b. of a railway-engine, the train or its passengers. ΘΚΠ society > travel > rail travel > [verb (intransitive)] > move by agency of steam puff1828 steam1862 1862 Mrs. H. Wood Verner's Pride viii, in Once a Week 19 July 102/2 The train was steaming into the station. 1899 Grattan Memory's Harkback 196 Now you can rail there, unconscious as to the beauties through which you have steamed. c. figurative (colloquial) ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > act or do vigorously [verb (intransitive)] twig1573 to go at ——1675 to go it1794 to come it1796 to lay it on thick1806 to blaze away1826 bushwhack1837 steam1842 split1844 rustle1882 to work like a demon1884 yank1888 go-at-it1904 to go somea1911 to put a jerk in it1919 to go (also do) one's (also a) dinger1923 to work (etc.) one's ass off1924 to go to town1933 to gie (or give) it laldy1974 1842 C. Fox Jrnl. 29 May (1882) viii. 156 Steamed away to London Bridge and saw the Maurices. 1849 C. Fox Jrnl. 13 June xv. 244 Steamed to Chelsea, and paid Mrs. Carlyle a humane little visit. 1857 T. Hughes Tom Brown's School Days i. vii. 167 Young Brooke..then steams away for the run in, in which he's sure to be first. 1911 Concise Oxf. Dict. Steam v...(colloq.) work vigorously, make great progress, esp. s. ahead, away. II. transitive. 8. a. To exhale (steam or other vapour); to emit, send out in the form of vapour. Also with adverbs, as forth, away, up. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > gas > [verb (transitive)] > emit as fumes or vapour vapourc1430 fume1563 exhalea1628 vaporatea1640 steam1666 outgas1971 off-gas1979 1666 Bp. S. Parker Free Censvre Platonick Philos. (1667) 208 The Earth may steam forth vapours grosse enough to cloud the Sun. 1730 J. Thomson Autumn in Seasons 150 The mighty bowl, Swell'd high with fiery juice, steams liberal round A potent gale. 1842 Ld. Tennyson Palace of Art (rev. ed.) in Poems (new ed.) I. 138 Tossing up A cloud of incense of all odour steam'd From out a golden cup. 1862 J. Oxenford Somebody's Luggage: His Umbrella in All Year Round Extra Christmas No., 4 Dec. 14/2 The gingham article that lay open before me, steaming away its moisture. 1871 G. MacDonald Wks. Fancy & Imagination III. 39 The moorland pond is steaming A mist of gray and blue. ΚΠ 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene ii. vi. sig. R5v Howe ill did him beseme In slouthfull sleepe his molten hart to steme. 9. a. To apply steam to, expose to the action of steam; to treat with steam for the purpose of softening, cooking, heating, disinfecting, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > cooking > cook [verb (transitive)] > steam steam1798 pressure-cook1922 the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > heating or making hot > subjection or exposure to heat or fire > subject or expose to heat or fire [verb (transitive)] > steam steam1798 1798 Trans. Soc. Arts 16 208 Potatoes that are either broiled or steamed. 1840 Mechanics' Mag. 33 498/1 The wood to be operated on, is first steamed, until it acquires such softness and pliancy, that it can be cut or blocked..into the different forms required. 1842 J. C. Loudon Suburban Horticulturist 210 A pipe..by which, whenever the water boils, the house may be steamed. 1844 E. A. Parnell's Appl. Chem. I. 370 [Calico-printing.] The cotton requires to be steamed about thirty minutes. 1899 T. C. Allbutt et al. Syst. Med. VIII. 757 It is usually recommended to steam the face over hot water. b. To expose (a gummed packet) to the action of steam in order to soften the gum. to steam open, to open by this method. Similarly, to steam (a postage stamp, label, etc.) off. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > gas > [verb (transitive)] > emit as fumes or vapour > expose (gummed paper) to steam steam1899 the world > space > relative position > condition of being open or not closed > open [verb (transitive)] > unseal > by steaming steam1899 the world > space > place > removal or displacement > remove or displace [verb (transitive)] > by steaming to steam (a postage stamp, label, etc.) off1944 1899 G. B. Burgin Bread of Tears i. ii. 35 He had steamed it over a jar of hot water, read the contents, and reclosed the letter. 1911 M. Beerbohm Zuleika Dobson xiv. 212 She might easily steam open the envelope and master its contents. 1920 M. Webb House in Dormer Forest xvi. 214 The kettle having complied, she began to steam the letter open. 1944 R. Lehmann Ballad & Source i. vi. 49 She used to send us postcards... We steamed the stamps off. 1979 ‘J. le Carré’ Smiley's People (1980) xix. 242 I can still tap your phone, steam open your mail. c. To fill with ‘steam’ or warm odour. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > [verb (transitive)] breathe1532 flavour1542 season1559 smellc1595 resent1602 stop1607 fling1637 tinge1690 savour1832 odorize1857 steam1861 1861 Two Cosmos II. v. viii. 191 Chops, steaks, toasted cheese, and almost all descriptions of drink steamed the whole apartment. d. To bedew (a surface) with vesicles of condensed vapour. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > liquid > condition of being or making wet > make wet [verb (transitive)] > with drops > of condensed vapour steam1860 1860 All Year Round 11 Feb. 362 Glass, already opaquely steamed with youthful breath. e. steam calico-printing. To fix (colours) by the steam-process. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > colour > colouring > dyeing > dye [verb (transitive)] > fix dye set1601 fix1665 strike1769 age1830 mordant1839 pad1839 steam calico-printing1862 society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > printmaking > surface and planographic printing > other surface-printing > [verb (transitive)] > textiles > fix colours steam calico-printing1862 1862 C. O'Neill Dict. Calico Printing at Steam colours The process of steaming colours. 10. To convey on a steam-vessel. colloquial. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > transportation by water > transport by water [verb (transitive)] > in specific type of craft or by specific propulsion rowa1470 boat1508 keel1599 barge1652 raft1667 drog1681 sculler1682 paddle1784 punt1818 scull1827 wherry1827 yawl1884 steam1891 submarine1918 gondolier1936 1891 C. MacEwen Three Women in Boat xv. 115 We will just..let him steam us back. 11. Colloquial with up. a. To stir up or rouse (ardour, etc.). rare. ΚΠ 1919 F. Hurst Humoresque 97 Ed says he'd never get him to steam up his nerve enough to call at a girl's house after her. 1931 Daily Express 21 Sept. 19/2 He was trying to steam up interest in the contest. b. To rouse or excite (a person), esp. to anger; to agitate, upset. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > excitement > exciting > excite [verb (transitive)] astirc1000 stir?c1225 araisec1374 entalentc1374 flamec1380 reara1382 raisec1384 commove1393 kindlea1400 fluster1422 esmove1474 talent1486 heavec1540 erect?1555 inflame1560 to set on gog1560 yark1565 tickle1567 flesh1573 concitate1574 rouse1574 warmc1580 agitate1587 spirit1598 suscitate1598 fermentate1599 nettle1599 startle1602 worka1616 exagitate1621 foment1621 flush1633 exacuatea1637 ferment1667 to work up1681 pique1697 electrify1748 rattle1781 pump1791 to touch up1796 excite1821 to key up1835 to steam up1909 jazz1916 steam1922 volt1930 whee1949 to fire up1976 geek1984 the mind > emotion > anger > [verb (transitive)] > make angry wrethec900 abelgheeOE abaeileOE teenOE i-wrathec1075 wratha1200 awratha1250 gramec1275 forthcalla1300 excitea1340 grieve1362 movea1382 achafea1400 craba1400 angerc1400 mada1425 provokec1425 forwrecchec1450 wrothc1450 arage1470 incensea1513 puff1526 angry1530 despite1530 exasperate1534 exasper1545 stunt1583 pepper1599 enfever1647 nanger1675 to put or set up the back1728 roil1742 outrage1818 to put a person's monkey up1833 to get one's back up1840 to bring one's nap up1843 rouse1843 to get a person's shirt out1844 heat1855 to steam up1860 to get one's rag out1862 steam1922 to burn up1923 to flip out1964 1922 H. C. Witwer in Collier's 17 June 22/4 Are you asking me to go with you so's to steam Rags Dempster up? 1964 P. G. Wodehouse Frozen Assets iii. 61 She's one of those calm, quiet girls you'd think nothing would steam up. a1974 R. Crossman Diaries (1977) III. 366 The Department have steamed me up into the idea that I have got a terrible series of difficulties here. 12. With up: Agriculture, to subject (an animal) to steaming up (see steaming n. 5). ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > providing or receiving food > feeding animals > [verb (transitive)] > fatten masteOE fatc1386 frankc1440 to set up1540 fatten1552 feed1552 cram1577 engrease1583 to raise in flesh1608 adipate1623 saginate1623 batten1638 to stall to1764 tallow1765 to fat off1789 to make up1794 higglea1825 finish1841 force1847 to feed off1852 steam1947 the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > animal keeping practices general > [verb (transitive)] > fatten masteOE fatc1386 to set up1540 fatten1552 feed1552 forcea1571 cram1577 engrease1583 to raise in flesh1608 saginate1623 to stall to1764 tallow1765 stall-feed1766 graze1787 to fat off1789 to make up1794 higglea1825 finish1841 to feed off1852 steam1947 1947 V. C. Fishwick Dairy Farming ii. 164 We steam-up our heifers and cows, and feed a balanced milk-production ration during the lactation period. 1959 Observer 15 Nov. 3/1 There are no special hazards in artificial twinning provided that the cow is generously fed—steamed up as it is called in farming language—before calving. 1969 N. W. Pirie Food Resources iii. 104 The extreme case is the process known as ‘steaming up’ or ‘flushing’ ewes before mating. The extra food given..increases the probability of conception. Draft additions 1993 d. to steam in, to start or join a fight. slang. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > dissent > fighting > fight [verb (intransitive)] > start or join a fight mix1895 to steam in1961 to throw down1979 1961 New Statesman 14 Apr. 576/2 As the underworld put it, ‘he steamed in like a slag and roughed them up as he topped them’. 1976 Scotsman 24 Dec. 15/1 As an amateur, Hope used to come to the gym and spar with Charles. He used to steam in and, if only for self protection, Charles was obliged to spank him sometimes. 1987 Daily Mail 2 Sept. 6/3 The term [steaming] was coined..from the Cockney slang ‘to steam in’, used when a group of youths pile in for a fight. Draft additions 1993 e. colloquial. To perform the action of steaming n. Additions. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > robbery > rob [verb (transitive)] > attack and rob huff1832 garrotte1858 mug1864 to jack up1965 steam1987 the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > robbery > rob [verb (intransitive)] > attack and rob > by force of numbers steam1987 1987 Daily Mail 2 Sept. 6/5 Usually unemployed and young,..they steam en masse into shops or on to buses, seize what they want from their victims and then break up. 1988 Daily Tel. 13 Feb. 3/1 A gang of 25 knife-wielding black youths..‘steamed’ through a late-night suburban British Rail train. 1989 Times 14 July 3/6 Several members of a mob of young robbers who ‘steamed’ through crowds at the Notting Hill Carnival in 1987 were jailed yesterday. Draft additions 1993 13. colloquial. To subject (a place or those in it) to, make (one's way) by, steaming (see steaming n. Additions). rare. ΚΠ 1987 Daily Tel. 2 Sept. 11/7 Crowds of youths ‘from nowhere’, never seen at Notting Hill before, could be seen from the stall, ‘steaming’ and pillaging their way through crowds of revellers. 1987 Times 13 Nov. 21/6 Late-night passengers on the Underground found themselves being steamed. A gang of about 20 youths went from carriage to carriage, threatening and robbing passengers. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1916; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.OEv.OE |
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