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 shaft [ʃæft]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 轴, 箭杆, 矛, 矿井

vt. 装杆于, 利用

[医] 干, 体, 柄




    shaft
    [ noun ]
    1. a line that forms the length of an arrow pointer

    2. <noun.communication>
    3. an aggressive remark directed at a person like a missile and intended to have a telling effect

    4. <noun.communication>
      his parting shot was `drop dead'
      she threw shafts of sarcasm
      she takes a dig at me every chance she gets
    5. a long rod or pole (especially the handle of an implement or the body of a weapon like a spear or arrow)

    6. <noun.artifact>
    7. a column of light (as from a beacon)

    8. <noun.phenomenon>
    9. the main (mid) section of a long bone

    10. <noun.body>
    11. obscene terms for penis

    12. <noun.body>
    13. a long pointed rod used as a tool or weapon

    14. <noun.artifact>
    15. a vertical passageway through a building (as for an elevator)

    16. <noun.artifact>
    17. (architecture) upright consisting of the vertical part of a column

    18. <noun.artifact>
    19. a long vertical passage sunk into the earth, as for a mine or tunnel

    20. <noun.artifact>
    21. a revolving rod that transmits power or motion

    22. <noun.artifact>
    23. the hollow spine of a feather

    24. <noun.animal>
    [ verb ]
    1. equip with a shaft

    2. <verb.possession>
    3. defeat someone through trickery or deceit

    4. <verb.competition> cheat chicane chouse jockey screw


    Shaft \Shaft\, n. [OE. shaft, schaft, AS. sceaft; akin to D.
    schacht, OHG. scaft, G. schaft, Dan. & Sw. skaft handle,
    haft, Icel. skapt, and probably to L. scapus, Gr. ????, ????,
    a staff. Probably originally, a shaven or smoothed rod. Cf.
    {Scape}, {Scepter}, {Shave}.]
    1. The slender, smooth stem of an arrow; hence, an arrow.

    His sleep, his meat, his drink, is him bereft,
    That lean he wax, and dry as is a shaft. --Chaucer.

    A shaft hath three principal parts, the stele
    [stale], the feathers, and the head. --Ascham.

    2. The long handle of a spear or similar weapon; hence, the
    weapon itself; (Fig.) anything regarded as a shaft to be
    thrown or darted; as, shafts of light.

    And the thunder,
    Winged with red lightning and impetuous rage,
    Perhaps hath spent his shafts. --Milton.

    Some kinds of literary pursuits . . . have been
    attacked with all the shafts of ridicule. --V. Knox.

    3. That which resembles in some degree the stem or handle of
    an arrow or a spear; a long, slender part, especially when
    cylindrical. Specifically: (a) (Bot.) The trunk, stem, or
    stalk of a plant.
    (b) (Zo["o]l.) The stem or midrib of a feather. See
    Illust. of {Feather}.
    (c) The pole, or tongue, of a vehicle; also, a thill.
    (d) The part of a candlestick which supports its branches.

    Thou shalt make a candlestick of pure gold . . .
    his shaft, and his branches, his bowls, his
    knops, and his flowers, shall be of the same.
    --Ex. xxv. 31.
    (e) The handle or helve of certain tools, instruments,
    etc., as a hammer, a whip, etc.
    (f) A pole, especially a Maypole. [Obs.] --Stow.
    (g) (Arch.) The body of a column; the cylindrical pillar
    between the capital and base (see Illust. of
    {Column}). Also, the part of a chimney above the roof.
    Also, the spire of a steeple. [Obs. or R.] --Gwilt.
    (h) A column, an obelisk, or other spire-shaped or
    columnar monument.

    Bid time and nature gently spare
    The shaft we raise to thee. --Emerson.
    (i) (Weaving) A rod at the end of a heddle.
    (j) (Mach.) A solid or hollow cylinder or bar, having one
    or more journals on which it rests and revolves, and
    intended to carry one or more wheels or other
    revolving parts and to transmit power or motion; as,
    the shaft of a steam engine. See Illust. of
    {Countershaft}.

    4. (Zo["o]l.) A humming bird ({Thaumastura cora}) having two
    of the tail feathers next to the middle ones very long in
    the male; -- called also {cora humming bird}.

    5. [Cf. G. schacht.] (Mining) A well-like excavation in the
    earth, perpendicular or nearly so, made for reaching and
    raising ore, for raising water, etc.

    6. A long passage for the admission or outlet of air; an air
    shaft.

    7. The chamber of a blast furnace.

    {Line shaft} (Mach.), a main shaft of considerable length, in
    a shop or factory, usually bearing a number of pulleys by
    which machines are driven, commonly by means of
    countershafts; -- called also {line}, or {main line}.

    {Shaft alley} (Naut.), a passage extending from the engine
    room to the stern, and containing the propeller shaft.

    {Shaft furnace} (Metal.), a furnace, in the form of a
    chimney, which is charged at the top and tapped at the
    bottom.

    1. The monument is a great rough granite shaft rising from a mound in the middle of a tawny clearing.
    2. The power plant, which turns a single propeller, is said to be capable of developing 22,000 shaft horsepower.
    3. "I missed one of those turns on the inside," he told me, "and it was like falling down an empty elevator shaft." In "Carmen Sings Monk," there are no casualties.
    4. The equipment which left Nevada on Friday will be used for an experiment tentatively scheduled in July to test a U.S. technique known as CORRTEX, in which the size of a nuclear blast is measured through a cable within 15 yards of a test shaft.
    5. Workers dug a vertical rescue shaft using a huge truck-mounted pipeline excavator that uses a stream of compressed air to chisel away dirt and clay and then vacuums out the loose dirt.
    6. Gottfried Milde, Hesse state interior minister, said 57 miners were in the shaft when the blast occurred at midday at the mine near Borken, 70 miles northeast of Frankfurt.
    7. Visitors are also invited to catch and eat trout from a lake created in 1963 by a nuclear explosion at the bottom of a 90-metre concrete shaft.
    8. Wayne Mitchell, 20, was not seriously hurt in his 30-foot fall down the narrow shaft, police said.
    9. The wire tip is as small as a shaft of the pin," the artist said.
    10. A preliminary report by the commission said the fire at the Vandellos I plant on the Mediterranean coast probably began when excessive shaft vibration caused failure of a mount holding one of the two turbine generators.
    11. Rescue workers and state officials said on Thursday that they believed no one could survive the high levels of poisonous carbon monoxide gas inside the shaft.
    12. Mining inspectors said too many miners were allowed in the Kreka coal mine shaft at the time of Sunday's blast, although they did not say how many miners should have been allowed.
    13. It is 2:30 in the afternoon, and for the past six hours he has been working 150 feet down in an eight-foot-diameter shaft known as Borehole 10-X.
    14. As for the GE engine, United Airlines recently found cracks in a fan shaft from another CF6-6 engine, according to the safety board.
    15. One of the wheels hit a fence post and broke the main shaft connecting the harnesses and the carriage.
    16. The cables also powered ventilators that were pumping fresh air into the mine shaft.
    17. Meador was an officer with the 87th Armored Field Artillery, the unit that occupied Quedlinburg and guarded the mine shaft where the treasures reportedly were kept.
    18. It added that a quarter-inch-thick stainless steel shaft has shown evidence of cracking in the past.
    19. The base of each point was notched or grooved to make it easier to fasten to a spear shaft.
    20. Lane and Larry Traxler of Hustontown entered the well with the pump and took it about halfway down the 3-foot wide shaft.
    21. It said 188 miners were in the shaft at the time of the explosion.
    22. One worker told Hallett the crew was preparing to drive in the bolts when the propeller shaft released and fell, Hallett said.
    23. Energy Department spokesman Jim Boyer pronounced the test "highly successful." The test, the first since Sept. 14, was conducted at the bottom of a shaft 1,850 feet beneath the surface.
    24. In August 1965, her husband and 24-year-old son, as well as two other workers, drowned at the bottom of a 27-foot shaft.
    25. The current price is under R31,000 per kilogram. Mr Maude said the Winkelhaak shaft would be viable if there could be confidence of a gold price of R32,000 a kilogram.
    26. Volunteers drilled a shaft parallel to the well, their progress made agonizingly slow because the hard rock dulled even diamond-tipped drill bits.
    27. DOE spokesman Chris West says a shaft drilled by Soviet technicians at the Soviet test site does not meet U.S. requirements.
    28. After boring for five hours, they reached the hotel elevator shaft and found Ms. Mallorca pinned beneath a beam.
    29. In the shaft it is 77 degrees.
    30. In 1981, Israeli militants dug a 25-yard shaft before Moslem guards stopped them.
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