Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A large monkey (Mandrillus leucophaeus) of west-central African forests, having an olive brown body and a brightly colored face and resembling the mandrill.
- noun An implement with cutting edges or a pointed end for boring holes in hard materials, usually by a rotating abrasion or repeated blows; a bit.
- noun The hand-operated or hand-powered holder for this implement.
- noun A loud, harsh noise made by or as if by a powered tool of this kind.
- noun Disciplined, repetitious exercise as a means of teaching and perfecting a skill or procedure.
- noun A task or exercise for teaching a skill or procedure by repetition.
- noun The training of soldiers in marching and the manual of arms.
- noun Any of various marine gastropod mollusks, chiefly of the genus Urosalpinx, that bore holes into the shells of bivalve mollusks. U. cinera is destructive to oysters.
- intransitive verb To make a hole in (a hard material) with a drill.
- intransitive verb To make (a hole) with or as if with a drill.
- intransitive verb To strike or hit sharply.
- intransitive verb To instruct thoroughly by repetition in a skill or procedure.
- intransitive verb To infuse knowledge of or skill in by repetitious instruction: synonym: teach.
- intransitive verb To train (soldiers) in marching and the manual of arms.
- intransitive verb To make a hole with or as if with a drill.
- intransitive verb To perform a training exercise.
- noun Durable cotton or linen twill of varying weights, generally used for work clothes.
- noun A shallow trench or furrow in which seeds are planted.
- noun A row of planted seeds.
- noun A machine or implement for planting seeds in holes or furrows.
- transitive verb To sow (seeds) in rows.
- transitive verb To plant (a field) in drills.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To trill; trickle; flow gently.
- To drain; draw off in drains or streams: as, water drilled through a boggy soil.
- noun A trade-name for drilling: often used in the plural.
- noun A sip, as of water.
- noun A rill.
- noun An apparatus used with a boring-tool which cuts on its end and is fed into the hole by a gimlet point, or with a tool such as is ordinarily turned by hand.
- To pierce or make a hole in with a drill or a similar tool, or as if with a drill.
- To make with a drill: as, to
drill a hole. - 3 To wear away or waste slowly.
- To instruct and exercise in military tactics and the use of arms; hence, to train in anything with the practical thoroughness characteristic of military training.
- On American railroads, to shift (cars or locomotives) about, or run them back and forth, at a terminus or station, in order to get them into the desired position.
- 6 To draw on; entice; decoy.
- [⟨ drill, n., 4.] In agri.: To sow in rows, drills, or channels: as, to
drill wheat. - To sow with seed in drills: as, the field was drilled, not sown broadcast.
- To go through exercises in military tactics.
- To sow seed in drills.
- noun In zoology, a baboon.
- noun Specifically, Mormon or Cynocephalus leucophæus, a baboon of western Africa, closely related to the mandrill, but smaller, with a black visage, and a stumpy erect tail scarcely two inches long.
- noun A tool for boring holes in metal, stone, or other hard substance; specifically, a steel cutting-tool fixed to a drill-stock, bow-lathe, or drilling-machine. See cuts under bow-drill, brace-drill, and cramp-drill.
- noun In mining, a borer: the more common term in the United States.
- noun In agriculture, a machine for planting seeds, as of grasses, wheat, oats, corn, etc., by dropping them in rows and covering them with earth.
- noun A row of seeds deposited in the earth.
- noun The trench or channel in which the seeds are deposited.
- noun A shell-fish which is destructive to oyster-beds by boring into the shells of young oysters.
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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HPFacebookVoteV2. init (336948, 'Even If They\'re Right, the Superfreakonomics Guys Only Have Half an Answer', 'The argument by the Superfreakonomics authors that we should try \ "geoengineering \" our way out of global warming seems to be a Rorschach test for the blogosphere: if you\'re the \ "drill, baby, drill\" type, you love it; if you\'re an environmentalist, you hate it.
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HPFacebookVoteV2. init (126355, 'Congress Weans Us Off the Teat of Foreign Oil with Concessions to Offshore Drilling', 'The Republican mandate to \ "drill, baby, drill\" is shortsighted and unsustainable, yet even the most rational of Dems is now kowtowing to this call.
Simran Sethi: Congress Weans Us Off the Teat of Foreign Oil with Concessions to Offshore Drilling 2009
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HPFacebookVoteV2. init (336948, 'Even If They\'re Right, the Superfreakonomics Guys Only Have Half an Answer', 'The argument by the Superfreakonomics authors that we should try \ "geoengineering \" our way out of global warming seems to be a Rorschach test for the blogosphere: if you\'re the \ "drill, baby, drill\" type, you love it; if you\'re an environmentalist, you hate it.
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HPFacebookVoteV2. init (126355, 'Congress Weans Us Off the Teat of Foreign Oil with Concessions to Offshore Drilling', 'The Republican mandate to \ "drill, baby, drill\" is shortsighted and unsustainable, yet even the most rational of Dems is now kowtowing to this call.
Simran Sethi: Congress Weans Us Off the Teat of Foreign Oil with Concessions to Offshore Drilling 2009
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Today when they finished drilling this large hole the first thing they did was they actually started banging on that -- what they call a drill steel that goes all the way down there.
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Today when they finished drilling this large hole the first thing they did was they actually started banging on that -- what they call a drill steel that goes all the way down there.
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Moynihan is against what she calls the drill and kill'' approach, and thinks math should count as fun.
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Sarah Palin, the woman who made the phrase "drill, baby, drill" popular, does the same thing in
NPR Topics: News 2011
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"Drill, baby, drill" is the only energy solution for McCain and Palin; for the Democrats, it is a stop gap measure on the way to a long term solution.
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What about the song "Drill, baby, drill" is that going out the window also?
Durbin: New safety standards likely for offshore drilling 2010
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Saving women and children first became known as the Birkenhead drill.
Should we care about people who need never exist? The Economist 2022
hernesheir commented on the word drill
To drill a man on, to decoy or flatter a man into any thing; also to amuse with delays. --old term from the south of England cited in Grose's A Provincial Dictionary, 1787.
You get the drill.
May 5, 2011