WIRED

wired

(adjective) tied or bound with wire; “wired bundles of newspapers”

pumped, pumped up, pumped-up(a), wired

(adjective) tense with excitement and enthusiasm as from a rush of adrenaline; “we were really pumped up for the race”; “he was so pumped he couldn’t sleep”

wired

(adjective) equipped with wire or wires especially for electric or telephone service; “a well-wired house”

Source: WordNet® 3.1


Etymology

Adjective

wired (comparative more wired, superlative most wired)

Equipped with wires, so as to connect to a power source or to other electric or electronic equipment; connected by wires.

Equipped with hidden electronic eavesdropping devices.

Reinforced, supported, tied or bound with wire.

(slang) Very excited, overstimulated; high-strung.

(zoology) Having wiry feathers.

(poker slang) Being a pair in seven card stud with one face up and one face down.

(poker slang) Being three of a kind as the first three cards in seven card stud.

(informal, of people or communities) Connected to the Internet; online.

Synonyms

• (equipped with a connection wire): corded

Antonyms

• wireless

Verb

wired

simple past tense and past participle of wire

Anagrams

• Dwire, WEIRD, weird, weĂŻrd, wider, wierd, wride, wried

Source: Wiktionary


WIRE

Wire, n. Etym: [OE. wir, AS. wir; akin to Icel. virr, Dan. vire, LG. wir, wire; cf. OHG. wiara fine gold; perhaps akin to E. withy. .]

1. A thread or slender rod of metal; a metallic substance formed to an even thread by being passed between grooved rollers, or drawn through holes in a plate of steel.

Note: Wire is made of any desired form, as round, square, triangular, etc., by giving this shape to the hole in the drawplate, or between the rollers.

2. A telegraph wire or cable; hence, an electric telegraph; as, to send a message by wire. [Colloq.] Wire bed, Wire mattress, an elastic bed bottom or mattress made of wires interwoven or looped together in various ways.

– Wire bridge, a bridge suspended from wires, or cables made of wire.

– Wire cartridge, a shot cartridge having the shot inclosed in a wire cage.

– Wire cloth, a coarse cloth made of woven metallic wire, -- used for strainers, and for various other purposes.

– Wire edge, the thin, wirelike thread of metal sometimes formed on the edge of a tool by the stone in sharpening it.

– Wire fence, a fence consisting of posts with strained horizontal wires, wire netting, or other wirework, between.

– Wire gauge or gage. (a) A gauge for measuring the diameter of wire, thickness of sheet metal, etc., often consisting of a metal plate with a series of notches of various widths in its edge. (b) A standard series of sizes arbitrarily indicated, as by numbers, to which the diameter of wire or the thickness of sheet metal in usually made, and which is used in describing the size or thickness. There are many different standards for wire gauges, as in different countries, or for different kinds of metal, the Birmingham wire gauges and the American wire gauge being often used and designated by the abbreviations B. W.G. and A. W.G. respectively.

– Wire gauze, a texture of finely interwoven wire, resembling gauze.

– Wire grass (Bot.), either of the two common grasses Eleusine Indica, valuable for hay and pasture, and Poa compressa, or blue grass. See Blue grass.

– Wire grub (Zoöl.), a wireworm.

– Wire iron, wire rods of iron.

– Wire lathing, wire cloth or wire netting applied in the place of wooden lathing for holding plastering.

– Wire mattress. See Wire bed, above.

– Wire micrometer, a micrometer having spider lines, or fine wires, across the field of the instrument.

– Wire nail, a nail formed of a piece of wire which is headed and pointed.

– Wire netting, a texture of woven wire coarser than ordinary wire gauze.

– Wire rod, a metal rod from which wire is formed by drawing.

– Wire rope, a rope formed wholly, or in great part, of wires.

Wire, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Wired; p. pr. & vb. n. Wiring.]

1. To bind with wire; to attach with wires; to apply wire to; as, to wire corks in bottling liquors.

2. To put upon a wire; as, to wire beads.

3. To snare by means of a wire or wires.

4. To send (a message) by telegraph. [Colloq.]

Wire, v. i.

1. To pass like a wire; to flow in a wirelike form, or in a tenuous stream. [R.] P. Fletcher.

2. To send a telegraphic message. [Colloq.]

Source: Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition



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Word of the Day

28 April 2024

POLYGENIC

(adjective) of or relating to an inheritable character that is controlled by several genes at once; of or related to or determined by polygenes


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Coffee Trivia

The first coffee-house in Mecca dates back to the 1510s. The beverage was in Turkey by the 1530s. It appeared in Europe circa 1515-1519 and was introduced to England by 1650. By 1675 the country had more than 3,000 coffee houses, and coffee had replaced beer as a breakfast drink.

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