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cartridge

 - 8 dictionary results
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car⋅tridge

[kahr-trij]
–noun
1. Also called cartouche. a cylindrical case of pasteboard, metal, or the like, for holding a complete charge of powder, and often also the bullet or the shot for a rifle, machine gun, or other small arm.
2. a case containing any explosive charge, as for blasting.
3. any small container for powder, liquid, or gas, made for ready insertion into some device or mechanism: an ink cartridge for a pen.
4. Also called magazine. Photography. a lightproof metal or plastic container for a roll of film, usually containing both the supply and take-up spools, as well as a pressure plate, for rapid loading without the necessity of threading the film.
5. Audio. pickup (def. 8).
6. a flat, compact container enclosing an endless loop of audiotape, operated by inserting into a slot in a player.

Origin:
1570–80; earlier cartage, cartrage, alter. of cartouche
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pick⋅up

[pik-uhp]
–noun
1. an improvement, as in health, business conditions, work, production, etc.
2. Informal. pick-me-up.
3. Informal. a casual, usually unintroduced acquaintance, often one made in hope of a sexual relationship.
4. an instance of stopping for or taking aboard passengers or freight, as by a train, ship, taxicab, etc., esp. an instance of taking freight or a shipment of goods onto a truck.
5. the person, freight, or shipment so taken aboard: The cab driver had a pickup at the airport who wanted to be driven to the docks.
6. Automotive.
a. capacity for rapid acceleration.
b. acceleration; increase in speed.
c. Also called pickup truck. a small truck with a low-sided open body, used for deliveries and light hauling.
7. Baseball. the act of fielding a ball after it hits the ground.
8. Also called cartridge. a small device attached to the end of a phonograph tone arm that contains a stylus and the mechanism that translates the movement of the stylus in a record groove into a changing electrical voltage.
9. Radio.
a. the act of receiving sound waves in the transmitting set in order to change them into electrical waves.
b. a receiving or recording device.
c. the place from which a broadcast is being transmitted.
d. interference (def. 4).
10. Television.
a. the change of light energy into electrical energy in a television camera.
b. camera tube.
c. a telecast made directly from the scene of an action.
11. a hitchhiker.
12. Metalworking. (in the cold-drawing of metal) the adhesion of particles of the metal to the die or plug.
–adjective
13. composed of or employing whatever persons are available on a more or less impromptu basis: a pickup game of baseball; a pickup dance band.
14. using whatever ingredients are handy or available: a Sunday night pickup supper.

Origin:
1855–60; n. use of v. phrase pick up
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2010.
Cite This Source Link To cartridge
car·tridge   (kär'trĭj)   
n.  
    1. A cylindrical, usually metal casing containing the primer and charge of ammunition for firearms.

    2. Such a casing fitted with a bullet.

    3. A similar piece of ammunition, such as a shotgun shell.

    4. A case containing magnetic tape in a reel; a cassette.

    5. A case containing a ribbon in a spool, for use in printers and electric typewriters.

  1. A case filled with high explosives, used in blasting.

  2. A small modular unit designed to be inserted into a larger piece of equipment: an ink cartridge; a disposable cartridge of caulking compound.

  3. A removable case containing the stylus and electric conversion circuitry in a phonograph pickup.

    1. A case containing magnetic tape in a reel; a cassette.

    2. A case containing a ribbon in a spool, for use in printers and electric typewriters.

  4. A lightproof case with photographic film that can be loaded directly into a camera.


[Alteration of earlier cartage, alteration of French cartouche, from Italian cartuccio, variant of cartoccio, roll of paper; see cartouche.]
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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Slang Dictionary
pickup

  1. n.
    something eaten or drunk to boost energy; a pick-me-up. : Bartender, I need a little pickup.
  2. n.
    a sudden increase in something, such as speed or tempo in music. : There will be a pickup in sales during the Christmas season.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition.
Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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Word Origin & History

cartridge 
1579, corruption of Fr. cartouche "a full charge for a pistol," from It. cartoccio "roll of paper," an augmentive form of M.L. carta "paper" (see card (n.)). The notion is of a roll of paper containing a charge for a firearm.

pickup 
"small truck used for light loads," 1932, from pick (v.) + up, the notion probably being for use to "pick up" (feed, lumber, etc.) and deliver it where it was needed. As an adj. meaning "temporary, ad hoc" (of a game, band, etc.) the word is recorded from 1936.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Financial Dictionary

pickup

A gain in yield that is achieved from swapping bonds. For example, a pickup of 30 basis points comes about when bonds with a 9.70% basis are traded for bonds with a 10.00% basis.

Wall Street Words: An A to Z Guide to Investment Terms by David L. Scott.
Copyright © 2003. Published by Houghton Mifflin.
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Encyclopedia

cartridge

in weaponry, unit of small-arms ammunition, composed of a metal (usually brass) case, a propellant charge, a projectile or bullet, and a primer. The first cartridges, appearing in the second half of the 16th century, consisted merely of charges of powder wrapped in paper; the ball was loaded separately. During the next century, methods of including the ball with the powder were devised. In muzzle-loading a musket, the soldier bit off the end of the paper cartridge, poured a small amount of the powder into the firing pan, poured the rest down the barrel, and rammed the ball and paper down after it.

Learn more about cartridge with a free trial on Britannica.com.

Encyclopedia Britannica, 2008. Encyclopedia Britannica Online.
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