Switch /(?)/
Switch
n.
-
A small, flexible twig or rod.
Mauritania, on the fifth medal, leads a horse with something like a thread; in her other hand she holds a switch.
- A movable part of a rail; or of opposite rails, for transferring cars from one track to another. (Railways)
- A separate mass or trees of hair, or of some substance (at jute) made to resemble hair, worn on the head by women.
- A device for shifting an electric current to another circuit, or for making and breaking a circuit. (Elec.)
Phrases & Compounds
- Safety switch
- a form of switch contrived to prevent or lessen the danger of derailment of trains.
- Switch back
- an arrangement of tracks whereby elevations otherwise insurmountable are passed. The track ascends by a series of zigzags, the engine running alternately forward and back, until the summit is reached.
- Switch board
- a collection of switches in one piece of apparatus, so arranged that a number of circuits may be connected or combined in any desired manner.
- Switch grass
- See under Grass.
Switch
v. t.
imp. & p. p. Switched; p. pr. & vb. n. Switching
- To strike with a switch or small flexible rod; to whip.
- To swing or whisk; as, to switch a cane.
- To trim, as, a hedge. [Prov. Eng.]
- To turn from one railway track to another; to transfer by a switch; -- generally with off, from, etc.; as, to switch off a train; to switch a car from one track to another.
- To shift to another circuit. (Eccl.)
Switch
v. i.
- To walk with a jerk. [Prov. Eng.]