单词 | scram |
释义 | scramn.1 = scran n. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > meal > picnic or packed meal > [noun] picnic1748 tea-treatc1748 a kettle of fish1791 scram1831 picnic meal1839 box supper1851 basket-meeting1859 picnic lunch1865 picnic tea1869 school feast1879 basket picnic1882 box lunch1889 basket dinner1892 basket lunch1905 packed lunch1906 sack lunch1972 brown-bag lunch1976 1831 S. Lover Legends & Stories Ireland 96 Bad scram to you, you thick-headed vagabone. 1831 S. Lover Legends & Stories Ireland Gloss. Bad scram, bad food. 1881 J. Sargisson Joe Scoap's Jurneh 148 He cot a model eh what he thowt t'shap on't sud be, oot of a lump eh baykin-scram. a1935 T. E. Lawrence Mint (1955) ii. xiii. 135 The hut lights were on and he had brought me a tin of tea and a hot sausage roll. ‘Scran up!’ he called... ‘What's all this in aid of?’ I asked, stupidly. 1936 F. Clune Roaming round Darling xxiv. 246 After unloading flour, spuds, tea, sugar—every kind of scram, we lobbed inside the house. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1982; most recently modified version published online March 2022). scramn.2 Nuclear Physics. The rapid shutting down of a nuclear reactor, usually in an emergency. Frequently attributive.Both this word and scram v.3 are possibly derived from scram v.2 ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > atomic nucleus > nuclear fission > nuclear reactor > [noun] > closure of reactor > for safety reasons shutdown1945 scram1953 scramming1958 1953 Nucleonics June 40/2 Momentary-contact types [of push button] used to operate..scram circuits. 1955 Nucleonics Sept. 53/2 Scram is initiated if preset power level is exceeded by 20%. 1959 New Scientist 26 Mar. 696/3 The [Nautilus submarine] Mark I had a constant plague of ‘scrams’ from such slight causes as vibration from a crew member's walking through the reactor compartment. 1968 F. Kertesz Lang. Nucl. Sci. (Oak Ridge Nat. Lab. TM 2367) 21 During the experiment that culminated on December 2, 1942 in the accomplishment of the first controlled nuclear chain reaction, a safety rod was held by a rope running through the pile and weighted on the opposite end. The young physicist in charge was told to watch the indicator; if it exceeded a certain value he was to cut the rope and scram. Since then the term scram is used to designate the emergency shutdown of a reactor. Today the urgency is lost and the word scram indicates simply a fast-shutdown operation. 1973 D. R. Inglis Nucl. Energy iv. 117 Emergency shutdown or scram equipment must be very sure to function properly. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1982; most recently modified version published online March 2022). scramadj. south-western dialect. Abnormally small, insignificant-looking, puny. scram hand, a withered hand (Elworthy, West Som. Gloss.); hence Comb. scram-handed adj. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > bodily height > shortness > [adjective] shorta900 littleOE lowa1398 untallc1535 dwarfish1542 shrimpish1549 pygmy1592 shrubby1603 dapper1606 punya1616 runtisha1642 truss1674 sesquipedalian1741 smally1764 petite1766 elfin1796 scram1825 squibbish1826 gnomic1845 dwarf-like1850 knee-high to a grasshopper1851 underhanded1856 nanoid1857 whipping-snapping1861 scrunty1868 midget1875 short-set1883 sawed-off1887 strunty1897 munchkin1930 sawn-off1936 short-arsed1951 1825 J. Jennings Observ. Dial. W. Eng. 69 Skram adj., awkward; stiff, as if benumbed. 1825 J. Jennings Observ. Dial. W. Eng. 69 Skram-handed adj., having the fingers or joints of the hand in such a state that it can with difficulty be used; an imperfect hand. 1853 G. P. R. Pulman Rustic Sketches (1871) Gloss. Scram, small, puny. ‘What a scram cheeld!’ 1872 T. Hardy Under Greenwood Tree I. i. v. 64 There's sure to be some poor little scram reason for't. 1891 T. Hardy Tess of the D'Urbervilles II. xxix. 101 I'd ha' knocked him down wi' the rolling-pin—a scram little feller like he! This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022). scramv.1 south-western dialect. passive. To be paralysed; to be benumbed (with cold). Also transferred of a wheel. ΚΠ c1460 (?c1400) Tale of Beryn l. 2381 A Crepill..with hondis al for-skramyd.] 1825 J. Jennings Observ. Dial. W. Eng. 69 To Skram v. a., to benumb with cold. 1894 B. Whitby Mary Fenwick's Daughter III. iii. 63 When the engine stops, her wheels get clogged up, and scrambed [with snow]. Derivatives ˈscrammed adj. ΚΠ 1697 R. Pierce Bath Mem. i. x. 235 He..being..willing to play; but, not having a ready Use of his Lower Parts, could not, but was Scramm'd, drawn up altogether. 1847 J. O. Halliwell Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words II Scrambed, deprived of the use of some limb by a nervous contraction of the muscles. Somerset. 1876 T. Hardy Hand of Ethelberta II. xlii. 180 On a frosty winter night he'll keep me there..till my arms be scrammed for want of motion. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022). scramv.2 slang (originally U.S.). intransitive. To depart quickly. Frequently imperative. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > go away [verb (intransitive)] > go away suddenly or hastily fleec825 runOE swervea1225 biwevec1275 skip1338 streekc1380 warpa1400 yerna1400 smoltc1400 stepc1460 to flee (one's) touch?1515 skirr1548 rubc1550 to make awaya1566 lope1575 scuddle1577 scoura1592 to take the start1600 to walk off1604 to break awaya1616 to make off1652 to fly off1667 scuttle1681 whew1684 scamper1687 whistle off1689 brush1699 to buy a brush1699 to take (its, etc.) wing1704 decamp1751 to take (a) French leave1751 morris1765 to rush off1794 to hop the twig1797 to run along1803 scoot1805 to take off1815 speela1818 to cut (also make, take) one's lucky1821 to make (take) tracks (for)1824 absquatulize1829 mosey1829 absquatulate1830 put1834 streak1834 vamoose1834 to put out1835 cut1836 stump it1841 scratch1843 scarper1846 to vamoose the ranch1847 hook1851 shoo1851 slide1859 to cut and run1861 get1861 skedaddle1862 bolt1864 cheese it1866 to do a bunkc1870 to wake snakes1872 bunk1877 nit1882 to pull one's freight1884 fooster1892 to get the (also to) hell out (of)1892 smoke1893 mooch1899 to fly the coop1901 skyhoot1901 shemozzle1902 to light a shuck1905 to beat it1906 pooter1907 to take a run-out powder1909 blow1912 to buzz off1914 to hop it1914 skate1915 beetle1919 scram1928 amscray1931 boogie1940 skidoo1949 bug1950 do a flit1952 to do a scarper1958 to hit, split or take the breeze1959 to do a runner1980 to be (also get, go) ghost1986 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > causing to go away > command to go away [verb (intransitive)] scud1602 go scrape!1611 to push off (also along)1740 to go it1797 to walk one's chalks1835 morris1838 scat1838 go 'long1859 to take a walk1881 shoot1897 skidoo1905 to beat it1906 to go to the dickens1910 to jump (or go (and) jump) in the lake1912 scram1928 to piss offa1935 to bugger off1937 to fuck off1940 go and have a roll1941 eff1945 to feck off?1945 to get lost1947 to sod off1950 bug1956 to hit, split or take the breeze1959 naff1959 frig1965 muck1974 to rack off1975 1928 W. Winchell in N.Y. Evening Graphic 4 Oct. 23 His [sc. Jack Conway's] popular slang creations include..‘scram’, meaning ‘git out!’ 1933 Punch 11 Jan. 29/3 Son, beat ut, d'ya get me?—Gwawn—S-C-R-R-A-M! 1937 D. L. Sayers Busman's Honeymoon iv. 84 Well, I must scram. 1940 N. Mitford Pigeon Pie iv. 75 She gave a sort of shriek..and scrammed. 1947 D. M. Davin Gorse blooms Pale 172 You tell her to scram. 1952 J. Cannan Body in Beck vii. 146 ‘Perhaps you would be good enough to withdraw.’..Sebastian said, ‘He means scram.’ 1961 P. G. Wodehouse Service with Smile vii. 109 ‘Go away, boy!’ he boomed. ‘You mean ‘Scram!’, don't you, chum?’ said George, who liked to get these things right. 1973 A. Hunter Gently French xi. 96 Kindly hook it... I just want you to scram. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1982; most recently modified version published online March 2022). scramv.3 Nuclear Physics. a. transitive. To shut down (a nuclear reactor), usually in an emergency. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > atomic nucleus > nuclear fission > nuclear reactor > close down [verb (transitive)] > for safety reasons to shut down1945 scram1950 1950 Amer. Speech 25 27 The point of neutron intensity at which the reactor is ‘scrammed’—shut down, automatically or otherwise. 1953 Nucleonics Jan. 40/2 The operator is provided with a control console from which he can change the position of rods, switch into automatic control, and scram the reactor. 1959 New Scientist 26 Mar. 695/3 A highly sensitive system of eighty different control circuits was designed to anticipate any dangerous instability of the reactor and within a fraction of a second initiate an emergency shutdown, or in the jargon of the nuclear engineer, ‘scram’ the reactor. 1973 D. R. Inglis Nucl. Energy iv. 95 The current can also be used, when it gets too strong, to trigger the emergency control rods and ‘scram’ or shut down the reactor. 1975 Nature 16 Oct. 526/1 At 1251, the operator decided to shut the reactor down by inserting the control rods into the core, thereby cutting off the chain reaction (in operator's parlance, he manually ‘scrammed’ the reactor). b. intransitive. Of a nuclear reactor: to shut down, usually in an emergency. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > atomic nucleus > nuclear fission > nuclear reactor > of reactor: become self-sustaining [verb (intransitive)] > close down to shut down1945 scram1957 1957 Nucleonics Feb. 56/3 After a reactor scrams, the question immediately arises: What circuit caused the scram and what happened during shutdown? 1979 New Scientist 19 Apr. 174/1 At 2350 lb/sq. in, the reactor automatically ‘scrammed’ and seconds later the pressure began to drop. Derivatives ˈscramming n. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > atomic nucleus > nuclear fission > nuclear reactor > [noun] > closure of reactor > for safety reasons shutdown1945 scram1953 scramming1958 1958 Nucleonics May 64 The entire basis for scramming..may well need to be re-examined for future power reactors. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1982; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11831n.21953adj.1825v.11697v.21928v.31950 |
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