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Drifting

 - 6 dictionary results

drift

[drift]
–noun
1. a driving movement or force; impulse; impetus; pressure.
2. Navigation. (of a ship) the component of the movement that is due to the force of wind and currents.
3. Oceanography. a broad, shallow ocean current that advances at the rate of 10 to 15 mi. (16 to 24 km) a day.
4. Nautical.
a. the flow or the speed in knots of an ocean current.
b. the distance between the end of a rope and the part in use.
c. the distance between two blocks in a tackle.
d. the difference in diameter between two parts, one of which fits within the other, as a mast and its mast hoops, or a treenail and its hole.
5. Aeronautics. the deviation of an aircraft from a set course due to cross winds.
6. the course along which something moves; tendency; aim: The drift of political events after the war was toward chaos.
7. a meaning; intent; purport: the drift of a statement.
8. something driven, as animals, rain, etc.
9. a heap of any matter driven together.
10. a snowdrift.
11. Geology. glacial drift.
12. the state or process of being driven.
13. overbearing power or influence.
14. Military. a tool used in charging an ordnance piece.
15. Electronics.
a. a gradual change in some operating characteristic of a circuit, tube, or other electronic device, either during a brief period as an effect of warming up or during a long period as an effect of continued use.
b. the movement of charge carriers in a semiconductor due to the influence of an applied voltage.
16. Linguistics. gradual change in the structure of a language.
17. Machinery.
a. Also called driftpin. a round, tapering piece of steel for enlarging holes in metal, or for bringing holes in line to receive rivets or bolts.
b. a flat, tapered piece of steel used to drive tools with tapered shanks, as drill bits, from their holders.
18. Civil Engineering. a secondary tunnel between two main tunnels or shafts.
19. Mining. an approximately horizontal passageway in underground mining.
20. Physics. the movement of charged particles under the influence of an electric field.
21. Aerospace. the gradual deviation of a rocket or guided missile from its intended trajectory.
22. Mechanics. displacement of the gimbals of a gyroscope due to friction on bearings, unbalance of the gyroscope's mass or other imperfections.
23. the thrust of an arched structure.
24. Dentistry. a shift of the teeth from their normal position in the dental arch.
25. Western U.S. a flock of animals or birds.
–verb (used without object)
26. to be carried along by currents of water or air, or by the force of circumstances.
27. to wander aimlessly: He drifts from town to town.
28. to be driven into heaps, as by the wind: drifting sand.
29. to deviate or vary from a set course or adjustment.
–verb (used with object)
30. to carry along: The current drifted the boat to sea.
31. to drive into heaps: The wind drifted the snow.
32. Machinery.
a. to enlarge (a punched or drilled hole) with a drift.
b. to align or straighten (holes, esp. rivet holes) with a drift.
33. drift off, to fall asleep gradually.

Origin:
1250–1300; ME drift, n. deriv. of OE drīfan to drive; c. D drift herd, flock, G Trift herd, pasturage, road to pasture


drift⋅ing⋅ly, adverb
driftless, adjective
drift⋅less⋅ness, noun


7. tenor. See tendency.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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drift   (drĭft)   
v.   drift·ed, drift·ing, drifts

v.   intr.
  1. To be carried along by currents of air or water: a balloon drifting eastward; as the wreckage drifted toward shore.

  2. To proceed or move unhurriedly and smoothly: drifting among the party guests.

  3. To move leisurely or sporadically from place to place, especially without purpose or regular employment: a day laborer, drifting from town to town.

    1. To wander from a set course or point of attention; stray.

    2. To vary from or oscillate randomly about a fixed setting, position, or mode of operation.

  4. To be piled up in banks or heaps by the force of a current: snow drifting to five feet.

v.   tr.
  1. To cause to be carried in a current: drifting the logs downstream.

  2. To pile up in banks or heaps: Wind drifted the loose straw against the barn.

  3. Western U.S. To drive (livestock) slowly or far afield, especially for grazing.

n.  
  1. The act or condition of drifting.

  2. Something moving along in a current of air or water.

  3. A bank or pile, as of sand or snow, heaped up by currents of air or water.

  4. Geology Rock debris transported and deposited by or from ice, especially by or from a glacier.

    1. A general trend or tendency, as of opinion. See Synonyms at tendency.

    2. General meaning or purport; tenor: caught the drift of the conversation.

    3. A gradual change in position.

    4. A gradual deviation from an original course, model, method, or intention.

    5. Variation or random oscillation about a fixed setting, position, or mode of behavior.

    6. A tool for ramming or driving something down.

    7. A tapered steel pin for enlarging and aligning holes.

    8. A horizontal or nearly horizontal passageway in a mine running through or parallel to a vein.

    9. A secondary mine passageway between two main shafts or tunnels.

    1. A gradual change in position.

    2. A gradual deviation from an original course, model, method, or intention.

    3. Variation or random oscillation about a fixed setting, position, or mode of behavior.

    4. A tool for ramming or driving something down.

    5. A tapered steel pin for enlarging and aligning holes.

    6. A horizontal or nearly horizontal passageway in a mine running through or parallel to a vein.

    7. A secondary mine passageway between two main shafts or tunnels.

  5. A gradual change in the output of a circuit or amplifier.

  6. The rate of flow of a water current.

    1. A tool for ramming or driving something down.

    2. A tapered steel pin for enlarging and aligning holes.

    3. A horizontal or nearly horizontal passageway in a mine running through or parallel to a vein.

    4. A secondary mine passageway between two main shafts or tunnels.

    1. A horizontal or nearly horizontal passageway in a mine running through or parallel to a vein.

    2. A secondary mine passageway between two main shafts or tunnels.

  7. A drove or herd, especially of swine. See Synonyms at flock1.


[From Middle English, drove, herd, act of driving; see dhreibh- in Indo-European roots.]
drift'y adj.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Main Entry:  drifting
Part of Speech:  n
Definition:  an extreme motor sport in which race cars slide sideways on racetrack turns
Dictionary.com's 21st Century Lexicon
Copyright © 2003-2009 Dictionary.com, LLC
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Word Origin & History

drift 
c.1300, lit. "a being driven" (of snow, etc.); not recorded in O.E., borrowed from O.N. or M.Du. drift, from P.Gmc. *driftiz, related to *dribanan "to drive." The verb is first attested c.1600. Sense of "what one is getting at" is from 1526. Drifter is first recorded 1864, as a mining term; meaning "a man following an aimless way of life" is from 1908. Driftwood first recorded 1633.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Medical Dictionary

Main Entry: drift
Pronunciation: 'drift
Function: noun
1 : movement of a tooth in the dental arch
2 : GENETIC DRIFTdrift intransitive verb
Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary, © 2002 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
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Medical Dictionary

drift (drĭft)
n.

  1. A gradual deviation from an original course, model, method, or intention.

  2. Movement of teeth from their normal position in the dental arch because of the loss of contiguous teeth.

  3. See genetic drift.

  4. A variation or random oscillation about a fixed setting, position, or mode of behavior.

The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
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