Pole /(?)/
Pole
n.
- A native or inhabitant of Poland; a Polander.
Pole
n.
- A long, slender piece of wood; a tall, slender piece of timber; the stem of a small tree whose branches have been removed;
- A measuring stick; also, a measure of length equal to 5 yards, or a square measure equal to 30 square yards; a rod; a perch.
Phrases & Compounds
- Pole bean
- any kind of bean which is customarily trained on poles, as the scarlet runner or the Lima bean.
- Pole flounder
- a large deep-water flounder (Glyptocephalus cynoglossus), native of the northern coasts of Europe and America, and much esteemed as a food fish; -- called also craig flounder, and pole fluke.
- Pole lathe
- a simple form of lathe, or a substitute for a lathe, in which the work is turned by means of a cord passing around it, one end being fastened to the treadle, and the other to an elastic pole above.
- Pole mast
- a mast formed from a single piece or from a single tree.
- Pole of a lens
- the point where the principal axis meets the surface.
- Pole plate
- a horizontal timber resting on the tiebeams of a roof and receiving the ends of the rafters. It differs from the plate in not resting on the wall.
Pole
v. t.
imp. & p. p. Poled; p. pr. & vb. n. Poling
- To furnish with poles for support; as, to pole beans or hops.
- To convey on poles; as, to pole hay into a barn.
- To impel by a pole or poles, as a boat.
- To stir, as molten glass, with a pole.
Pole
n.
- Either extremity of an axis of a sphere; especially, one of the extremities of the earth's axis; as, the north pole.
- A point upon the surface of a sphere equally distant from every part of the circumference of a great circle; or the point in which a diameter of the sphere perpendicular to the plane of such circle meets the surface. Such a point is called the pole of that circle; as, the pole of the horizon; the pole of the ecliptic; the pole of a given meridian. (Spherics)
- One of the opposite or contrasted parts or directions in which a polar force is manifested; a point of maximum intensity of a force which has two such points, or which has polarity; as, the poles of a magnet; the north pole of a needle. (Physics)
-
The firmament; the sky. [Poetic]
Shoots against the dusky pole.
- See Polarity, and Polar, n. (Geom.)
Phrases & Compounds
- Magnetic pole
- See under Magnetic.
- Poles of the earth
- the two opposite points on the earth's surface through which its axis passes.
- Poles of the heavens
- the two opposite points in the celestial sphere which coincide with the earth's axis produced, and about which the heavens appear to revolve.