wheel
1wheel
noun, often attributive \ˈhwēl, ˈwēl\Definition of WHEEL
Examples of WHEEL
- The car's rear wheels started to spin on the icy road.
- the wheels of a train
- a suitcase with wheels on the bottom
- a wheel of cheddar cheese
Origin of WHEEL
Related to WHEEL
Other Mechanical Engineering Terms
2wheel
verbDefinition of WHEEL
Examples of WHEEL
- Doctors wheeled the patient into the operating room.
- He wheeled his motorcycle into the garage.
- Our waiter wheeled out a small dessert cart.
- She wheeled around in her chair when I entered the room.
First Known Use of WHEEL
wheel
noun (Concise Encyclopedia)Circular frame of hard material capable of turning on an axle. Wheels may be solid, partly solid, or spoked. The oldest known wheel was a wooden disk of planks held together by crosspieces. A pottery wheel or turntable was developed c. 3500 BC in Mesopotamia. The spoked wheel appeared c. 2000 BC on chariots in Asia Minor. Later developments included iron hubs that turned on greased axles. Perhaps the most important invention in human history, the wheel was essential to developing civilizations, and has remained essential to power generation, transportation, industrial manufacturing, and countless other applications.
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