careen
English
WOTD – 26 November 2006
Etymology
Late 16th century, from French carene (“keel”), from Genoese Ligurian carena, from Latin carina (“keel of a ship”), from Proto-Indo-European *kert-, *kret- (“strong, powerful”), see also Ancient Greek κράτυς (krátus, “strong”), κράτος (krátos, “strength, power, dominion”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kəˈɹiːn/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -iːn
Verb
careen (third-person singular simple present careens, present participle careening, simple past and past participle careened)
- (nautical) To heave a ship down on one side so as to expose the other, in order to clean it of barnacles and weed, or to repair it below the water line.
- (nautical) To tilt on one side.
- To lurch or sway violently from side to side.
- To tilt or lean while in motion. [from late 19th c.]
- (chiefly US) To career, to move rapidly straight ahead, to rush carelessly. [from at least early 20th c.]
- 1909, E.M. Forster, “I”, in The Machine Stops:
- They were not motionless, but swayed to and fro above her head, thronging out of one sky-light into another, as if the universe and not the air-ship was careening.
-
- (chiefly US) To move swiftly and in an uncontrolled way.
- 2016 December 20, Katie Rife, “Passengers strains the considerable charms of Chris Pratt and Jennifer Lawrence”, in The Onion AV Club:
- He tries for a lot of things, careening wildly from earnest romance to feel-good comedy to hackneyed suspense, all the while leaving it up to the audience to suss out the moral complexity and existential terror underneath the glossy surface.
- 2008, Philip Roth, Indignation:
- The car in which I had taken Olivia to dinner and then out to the cemetery — a historic vehicle, even a monument of sorts, in the history of fellatio's advent onto the Winesburg campus in the second half of the twentieth century — went careening off to the side and turned end-over-end down Lower Main until it exploded in flames...
-
Usage notes
The "move rapidly" senses are considered by some, especially in British English, to be an error due to confusion with "career".
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
to heave a ship down on one side so as to expose the other
to tilt on one side
|
|
to sway violently from side to side or lurch
to tilt or lean while in motion
|
Spanish
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.