释义 |
cable I. \ˈkābəl\ noun (-s) Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English, from Old North French, from Medieval Latin capulum lasso, from Latin capere to take — more at heave 1. a. : a strong rope; especially : a rope 10 or more inches in circumference b. : a cable-laid rope c. : a wire rope or metal chain of great strength used especially for hauling, for securing a ship to an anchor, or for supporting the rods and roadway of a suspension bridge d. : a wire or wire rope by means of which force is exerted to control or operate a mechanism < ailerons operated by control cables > 2. : cable length 3. a. : a ropelike usually stranded assembly of electrical conductors or of groups of two or more conductors insulated from each other but laid up together usually by being twisted around a central core, the whole usually heavily insulated by outside wrappings; specifically : a submarine cable — see telegraph cable b. [by shortening] : cablegram c. : cable transfer 4. a. : something resembling or fashioned like a cable < creepers of many kinds and of every size, from huge cables to thin cords, loop from tree to tree — C.D.Forde > < a cable motif > b. : a convex molding that occupies a flute of a column or pilaster usually in the lower part of the shaft c. also cable stitch : a knitting stitch that produces a pattern resembling the twist of a 2-ply cable < a cable on a sweater > II. verb (cabled ; cabled ; cabling \ˈkāb(ə)liŋ\ ; cables) transitive verb 1. : to fasten with or as if with a cable 2. : to ornament with something resembling a cable 3. : to telegraph by a submarine cable 4. architecture : to fill (flutes) with cables 5. : to make into a cable or into a form resembling a cable; specifically : to twist together (two or more strands, plied yarns, or threads) intransitive verb 1. : to communicate by a submarine cable < cable for immediate delivery of goods > 2. : to make a cable stitch III. noun : cable television herein |