| a screen or mat covered with a dark material for shielding a camera lens from excess light or glare. |
| the offspring of a zebra and a donkey. |
wheel (wiːl) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a solid disc, or a circular rim joined to a hub by radial or tangential spokes, that is mounted on a shaft about which it can turn, as in vehicles and machines |
| 2. | anything like a wheel in shape or function |
| 3. | a device consisting of or resembling a wheel or having a wheel as its principal component: a steering wheel; a water wheel |
| 4. | the wheel a medieval torture consisting of a wheel to which the victim was tied and then had his limbs struck and broken by an iron bar |
| 5. | wheel of fortune short for potter's wheel |
| 6. | the act of turning |
| 7. | a pivoting movement of troops, ships, etc |
| 8. | a type of firework coiled to make it rotate when let off |
| 9. | Compare bob a set of short rhyming lines, usually four or five in number, forming the concluding part of a stanza |
| 10. | the disc in which the ball is spun in roulette |
| 11. | (US), (Canadian) an informal word for bicycle |
| 12. | archaic a refrain |
| 13. | informal chiefly (US), (Canadian) a person of great influence (esp in the phrase big wheel) |
| 14. | at the wheel |
| a. driving or steering a vehicle or vessel | |
| b. in charge | |
| —vb (when intr | |
| 15. | to turn or cause to turn on or as if on an axis |
| 16. | to move or cause to move on or as if on wheels; roll |
| 17. | (tr) to perform with or in a circular movement |
| 18. | (tr) to provide with a wheel or wheels |
| 19. | to change one's mind or opinion |
| 20. | informal wheel and deal to be a free agent, esp to advance one's own interests |
| [Old English hweol, hweowol; related to Old Norse hvēl, Greek kuklos, Middle Low German wēl, Dutch wiel] | |
| 'wheel-less | |
| —adj | |
wheel definition
|
(Heb. galgal; rendered "wheel" in Ps. 83:13, and "a rolling thing" in Isa. 17:13; R.V. in both, "whirling dust"). This word has been supposed to mean the wild artichoke, which assumes the form of a globe, and in autumn breaks away from its roots, and is rolled about by the wind in some places in great numbers.
wheels within wheels
Complex interacting processes, agents, or motives, as in It's difficult to find out just which government agency is responsible; there are wheels within wheels. This term, which now evokes the complex interaction of gears, may derive from a scene in the Bible (Ezekiel 1:16): "Their appearance and their work was as it were a wheel in the middle of a wheel." [c. 1600]