Word Meanings - THROWER - Book Publishers vocabulary database
One who throws. Specifically: One who throws or twists silk; a throwster. One who shapes vessels on a throwing engine.
Related words: (words related to THROWER)
- ENGINER
A contriver; an inventor; a contriver of engines. Shak. - ENGINERY
1. The act or art of managing engines, or artillery. Milton. 2. Engines, in general; instruments of war. Training his devilish enginery. Milton. 3. Any device or contrivance; machinery; structure or arrangement. Shenstone. - SPECIFICALLY
In a specific manner. - THROW
Pain; especially, pain of travail; throe. Spenser. Dryden. - THROWING
a. & n. from Throw, v. Throwing engine, Throwing mill, Throwing table, or Throwing wheel , a machine on which earthenware is first rudely shaped by the hand of the potter from a mass of clay revolving rapidly on a disk or table carried - THROW-OFF
A start in a hunt or a race. - THROWER
One who throws. Specifically: One who throws or twists silk; a throwster. One who shapes vessels on a throwing engine. - ENGINEMAN
A man who manages, or waits on, an engine. - ENGINEER CORPS; CORPS OF ENGINEERS
In the United States army, the Corps of Engineers, a corps of officers and enlisted men consisting of one band and three battalions of engineers commanded by a brigadier general, whose title is Chief of Engineers. It has charge of the construction - THROWN
a. & p. p. from Throw, v. Thrown silk, silk thread consisting of two or more singles twisted together like a rope, in a direction contrary to that in which the singles of which it is composed are twisted. M'Culloch. -- Thrown singles, silk thread - THROWSTER
One who throws or twists silk; a thrower. - ENGINE
A compound machine by which any physical power is applied to produce a given physical effect. Engine driver, one who manages an engine; specifically, the engineer of a locomotive. -- Engine lathe. See under Lathe. -- Engine tool, a machine tool. - ENGINEER
1. A person skilled in the principles and practice of any branch of engineering. See under Engineering, n. 2. One who manages as engine, particularly a steam engine; an engine driver. 3. One who carries through an enterprise by skillful or artful - ENGINEERING
Originally, the art of managing engines; in its modern and extended sense, the art and science by which the mechanical properties of matter are made useful to man in structures and machines; the occupation and work of an engineer. Note: - THROWE
A turning lathe. - THROW-CROOK
An instrument used for twisting ropes out of straw. - THROWING STICK
An instrument used by various savage races for throwing a spear; -- called also throw stick and spear thrower. One end of the stick receives the butt of the spear, as upon a hook or thong, and the other end is grasped with the hand, which also holds - ENGINE-SIZED
Sized by a machine, and not while in the pulp; -- said of paper. Knight. - ENGINE-TYPE GENERATOR
A generator having its revolving part carried on the shaft of the driving engine. - AIR ENGINE
An engine driven by heated or by compressed air. Knight. - RADIANT ENGINE
A semiradial engine. See Radial engine, above. - RADIAL ENGINE
An engine, usually an internal-combustion engine of a certain type having several cylinders arranged radially like the spokes of a complete wheel. The semiradial engine has radiating cylinders on only one side of the crank shaft. - SEMIRADIAL ENGINE
See ABOVE - MISTHROW
To throw wrongly. - OUTTHROW
1. To throw out. Spenser. 2. To excel in throwing, as in ball playing. - STEAM ENGINE
An engine moved by steam. Note: In its most common forms its essential parts are a piston, a cylinder, and a valve gear. The piston works in the cylinder, to which steam is admitted by the action of the valve gear, and communicates motion to the - TANDEM ENGINE
A steam engine having two or more steam cylinders in line, with a common piston rod. - WATER ENGINE
An engine to raise water; or an engine moved by water; also, an engine or machine for extinguishing fires; a fire engine. - TWO-THROW
Capable of being thrown or cranked in two directions, usually opposite to one another; as, a two-throw crank; a two-throw switch. Having two crank set near together and opposite to one another; as, a two-throw crank shaft.