fusee
See also: fusée
English
Noun
fusee (plural fusees)
- A conical, grooved pulley in early clocks.
- A large friction match.
- 1914, "Saki", ‘The Dreamer’, Beasts and Superbeasts, Penguin 2000 (Complete Short Stories), page 322:
- A comfortable hammock on a warm afternoon would appeal to his indolent tastes, and then, when he was getting drowsy, a lighted fusee thrown into the nest would bring the wasps out in an indignant mass, and they would soon find a ‘home away from home’ on Waldo's fat body.
- 1914, "Saki", ‘The Dreamer’, Beasts and Superbeasts, Penguin 2000 (Complete Short Stories), page 322:
- A fuse for an explosive.
- (US) A colored flare used as a warning on the railroad.
- A fusil, or flintlock musket.
Etymology 2
Uncertain.
Noun
fusee (plural fusees)
Noun
fusee (plural fusees)
- One who, or that which, fuses or is fused; an individual component of a fusion.
- 2002, Philosophical Topics, volume 30, issue 1, page 276:
- This is the fusion of two people who are neurally and biologically (and so, psychologically) identical. Setting aside issues about intensional content, when these differ, such a fusion would clearly produce someone who is exactly like what either of the fusees would have been like had the fusion not occurred.
- 2002, Philosophical Topics, volume 30, issue 1, page 276:
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