pulley
N ร อก sheave lift pry rok
PULLEY
n.plu. pulleys. [L. polus; Gr. to turn. ] A small wheel turning on a pin in a block, with a furrow or groove in which runs the rope that turns it. The pulley is one of the mechanical powers. The word is used also in the general sense of tackle, to denote all parts of the machine for raising weights, of which the pulley forms a part.
Pul "ley, n.; pl. Pulleys. Etym: [F. poulie, perhaps of Teutonic origin (cf. Poll, b. t.); but cf. OE. poleine, polive, pulley, LL. polanus, and F. poulain, properly, a colt, fr. L. pullus young animal, foal (cf. Pullet, Foal ). For the change of sense, cf. F. poutre beam, originally, a filly, and E. easel. ] (Mach. )
PULLEY Pul "ley, b. t.
pul ley |ˈpo͝olē ˈpʊli | ▶noun ( pl. pulleys ) (also pulley wheel ) a wheel with a grooved rim around which a cord passes. It acts to change the direction of a force applied to the cord and is chiefly used (typically in combination ) to raise heavy weights. Compare with block ( sense 7 of the noun ). • (on a bicycle ) a wheel with a toothed rim around which the chain passes. • a wheel or drum fixed on a shaft and turned by a belt, used esp. to increase speed or power. ▶verb ( pulleys, pulleying, pulleyed ) [ with obj. ] hoist with a pulley. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French polie, probably from a medieval Greek diminutive of polos ‘pivot, axis. ’
pulley block
pul ley block ▶noun a block or casing in which one or more pulleys are mounted.
pul ¦ley |ˈpʊli | ▶noun ( pl. pulleys ) a wheel with a grooved rim around which a cord passes, which acts to change the direction of a force applied to the cord and is used to raise heavy weights. • a wheel or drum fixed on a shaft and turned by a belt, used for the application or transmission of power. ▶verb ( pulleys, pulleying, pulleyed ) [ with obj. ] hoist with a pulley. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French polie, probably from a medieval Greek diminutive of polos ‘pivot, axis ’.
pul ley /pʊ́li /名詞 複 ~s C 滑車, ベルト車 .