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9 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
wind
/ˈwɪnd/
風,氣息,氣味,呼吸,胸口,風聲,趨勢,空談,卷繞,絞車,彎曲(
vt
.)使通風,嗅出
From:
Network Terminology
wind
卷
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Wind
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Wound
(
rarely
Winded
);
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Winding
.]
1.
To
turn
completely
,
or
with
repeated
turns
;
especially
,
to
turn
about
something
fixed
;
to
cause
to
form
convolutions
about
anything
;
to
coil
;
to
twine
;
to
twist
;
to
wreathe
;
as
,
to
wind
thread
on
a
spool
or
into
a
ball
.
Whether
to
wind
The
woodbine
round
this
arbor
. --
Milton
.
2.
To
entwist
;
to
infold
;
to
encircle
.
Sleep
,
and
I
will
wind
thee
in
arms
.
--
Shak
.
3.
To
have
complete
control
over
;
to
turn
and
bend
at
one's
pleasure
;
to
vary
or
alter
or
will
;
to
regulate
;
to
govern
.
“To
turn
and
wind
a
fiery
Pegasus.”
In
his
terms
so
he
would
him
wind
.
--
Chaucer
.
Gifts
blind
the
wise
,
and
bribes
do
please
And
wind
all
other
witnesses
. --
Herrick
.
Were
our
legislature
vested
in
the
prince
,
he
might
wind
and
turn
our
constitution
at
his
pleasure
.
--
Addison
.
4.
To
introduce
by
insinuation
;
to
insinuate
.
You
have
contrived
. . .
to
wind
Yourself
into
a
power
tyrannical
. --
Shak
.
Little
arts
and
dexterities
they
have
to
wind
in
such
things
into
discourse
.
--
Gov
.
of
Tongue
.
5.
To
cover
or
surround
with
something
coiled
about
;
as
,
to
wind
a
rope
with
twine
.
To wind off
,
to
unwind
;
to
uncoil
.
To wind out
,
to
extricate
. [
Obs
.] --
Clarendon
.
To wind up
.
(a)
To
coil
into
a
ball
or
small
compass
,
as
a
skein
of
thread
;
to
coil
completely
.
(b)
To
bring
to
a
conclusion
or
settlement
;
as
,
to wind up
one's
affairs
;
to
wind up
an
argument
.
(c)
To
put
in
a
state
of
renewed
or
continued
motion
,
as
a
clock
,
a
watch
,
etc
.,
by
winding
the
spring
,
or
that
which
carries
the
weight
;
hence
,
to
prepare
for
continued
movement
or
action
;
to
put
in
order
anew
.
“Fate
seemed
to
wind
him
up
for
fourscore
years.”
--
Dryden
.
“Thus
they
wound
up
his
temper
to
a
pitch.”
--
Atterbury
.
(d)
To
tighten
(
the
strings
)
of
a
musical
instrument
,
so
as
to
tune
it
.
“
Wind
up
the
slackened
strings
of
thy
lute.”
--
Waller
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Wind
v. i.
1.
To
turn
completely
or
repeatedly
;
to
become
coiled
about
anything
;
to
assume
a
convolved
or
spiral
form
;
as
,
vines
wind
round
a
pole
.
So
swift
your
judgments
turn
and
wind
.
--
Dryden
.
2.
To
have
a
circular
course
or
direction
;
to
crook
;
to
bend
;
to
meander
;
as
,
to
wind
in
and
out
among
trees
.
And
where
the
valley
winded
out
below
,
The
murmuring
main
was
heard
,
and
scarcely
heard
,
to
flow
. --
Thomson
.
He
therefore
turned
him
to
the
steep
and
rocky
path
which
. . .
winded
through
the
thickets
of
wild
boxwood
and
other
low
aromatic
shrubs
.
--
Sir
W
.
Scott
.
3.
To
go
to
the
one
side
or
the
other
;
to
move
this
way
and
that
;
to
double
on
one's
course
;
as
,
a
hare
pursued
turns
and
winds
.
The
lowing
herd
wind
░
lowly
o'er
the
lea
.
--
Gray
.
To
wind
out
,
to
extricate
one's
self
;
to
escape
.
Long
struggling
underneath
are
they
could
wind
Out
of
such
prison
. --
Milton
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Wind
n.
The
act
of
winding
or
turning
;
a
turn
;
a
bend
;
a
twist
;
a
winding
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Wind
n.
1.
Air
naturally
in
motion
with
any
degree
of
velocity
;
a
current
of
air
.
Except
wind
stands
as
never
it
stood
,
It
is
an
ill
wind
that
turns
none
to
good
. --
Tusser
.
Winds
were
soft
,
and
woods
were
green
.
--
Longfellow
.
2.
Air
artificially
put
in
motion
by
any
force
or
action
;
as
,
the
wind
of
a
cannon
ball
;
the
wind
of
a
bellows
.
3.
Breath
modulated
by
the
respiratory
and
vocal
organs
,
or
by
an
instrument
.
Their
instruments
were
various
in
their
kind
,
Some
for
the
bow
,
and
some
for
breathing
wind
. --
Dryden
.
4.
Power
of
respiration
;
breath
.
If
my
wind
were
but
long
enough
to
say
my
prayers
,
I
would
repent
.
--
Shak
.
5.
Air
or
gas
generated
in
the
stomach
or
bowels
;
flatulence
;
as
,
to
be
troubled
with
wind
.
6.
Air
impregnated
with
an
odor
or
scent
.
A
pack
of
dogfish
had
him
in
the
wind
.
--
Swift
.
7.
A
direction
from
which
the
wind
may
blow
;
a
point
of
the
compass
;
especially
,
one
of
the
cardinal
points
,
which
are
often
called
the
four
winds
.
Come
from
the
four
winds
,
O
breath
,
and
breathe
upon
these
slain
.
--
Ezek
.
xxxvii
. 9.
Note:
☞
This
sense
seems
to
have
had
its
origin
in
the
East
.
The
Hebrews
gave
to
each
of
the
four
cardinal
points
the
name
of
wind
.
8.
Far.
A
disease
of
sheep
,
in
which
the
intestines
are
distended
with
air
,
or
rather
affected
with
a
violent
inflammation
.
It
occurs
immediately
after
shearing
.
9.
Mere
breath
or
talk
;
empty
effort
;
idle
words
.
Nor
think
thou
with
wind
Of
airy
threats
to
awe
. --
Milton
.
10.
Zool.
The
dotterel
. [
Prov
.
Eng
.]
11.
Boxing
The
region
of
the
pit
of
the
stomach
,
where
a
blow
may
paralyze
the
diaphragm
and
cause
temporary
loss
of
breath
or
other
injury
;
the
mark
. [
Slang
or
Cant
]
Note:
☞
Wind
is
often
used
adjectively
,
or
as
the
first
part
of
compound
words
.
All in the wind
.
Naut.
See
under
All
,
n.
Before the wind
.
Naut.
See
under
Before
.
Between wind and water
Naut.
,
in
that
part
of
a
ship's
side
or
bottom
which
is
frequently
brought
above
water
by
the
rolling
of
the
ship
,
or
fluctuation
of
the
water's
surface
.
Hence
,
colloquially
, (
as
an
injury
to
that
part
of
a
vessel
,
in
an
engagement
,
is
particularly
dangerous
)
the
vulnerable
part
or
point
of
anything
.
Cardinal winds
.
See
under
Cardinal
,
a.
Down the wind
.
(a)
In
the
direction
of
,
and
moving
with
,
the
wind
;
as
,
birds
fly
swiftly
down
the
wind
.
(b)
Decaying
;
declining
;
in
a
state
of
decay
. [
Obs
.]
“He
went
down
the
wind
still.”
--
L'Estrange
.
In the wind's eye
Naut.
,
directly
toward
the
point
from
which
the
wind
blows
.
Three sheets in the wind
,
unsteady
from
drink
. [
Sailors
'
Slang
]
To be in the wind
,
to
be
suggested
or
expected
;
to
be
a
matter
of
suspicion
or
surmise
. [
Colloq
.]
To carry the wind
Man.
,
to
toss
the
nose
as
high
as
the
ears
,
as
a
horse
.
To raise the wind
,
to
procure
money
. [
Colloq
.]
To take the wind
or
To have the wind
,
to
gain
or
have
the
advantage
. --
Bacon
.
To take the wind out of one's sails
,
to
cause
one
to
stop
,
or
lose
way
,
as
when
a
vessel
intercepts
the
wind
of
another
;
to
cause
one
to
lose
enthusiasm
,
or
momentum
in
an
activity
. [
Colloq
.]
To take wind
,
or
To get wind
,
to
be
divulged
;
to
become
public
;
as
,
the
story
got
wind
,
or
took
wind
.
Wind band
Mus.
,
a
band
of
wind
instruments
;
a
military
band
;
the
wind
instruments
of
an
orchestra
.
Wind chest
Mus.
,
a
chest
or
reservoir
of
wind
in
an
organ
.
Wind dropsy
.
Med.
(a)
Tympanites
.
(b)
Emphysema
of
the
subcutaneous
areolar
tissue
.
Wind egg
,
an
imperfect
,
unimpregnated
,
or
addled
egg
.
Wind furnace
.
See
the
Note
under
Furnace
.
Wind gauge
.
See
under
Gauge
.
Wind gun
.
Same
as
Air gun
.
Wind hatch
Mining
,
the
opening
or
place
where
the
ore
is
taken
out
of
the
earth
.
Wind instrument
Mus.
,
an
instrument
of
music
sounded
by
means
of
wind
,
especially
by
means
of
the
breath
,
as
a
flute
,
a
clarinet
,
etc
.
Wind pump
,
a
pump
moved
by
a
windmill
.
Wind rose
,
a
table
of
the
points
of
the
compass
,
giving
the
states
of
the
barometer
,
etc
.,
connected
with
winds
from
the
different
directions
.
Wind sail
.
(a)
Naut.
A
wide
tube
or
funnel
of
canvas
,
used
to
convey
a
stream
of
air
for
ventilation
into
the
lower
compartments
of
a
vessel
.
(b)
The
sail
or
vane
of
a
windmill
.
Wind shake
,
a
crack
or
incoherence
in
timber
produced
by
violent
winds
while
the
timber
was
growing
.
Wind shock
,
a
wind
shake
.
Wind side
,
the
side
next
the
wind
;
the
windward
side
. [
R
.] --
Mrs
.
Browning
.
Wind rush
Zool.
,
the
redwing
. [
Prov
.
Eng
.]
Wind wheel
,
a
motor
consisting
of
a
wheel
moved
by
wind
.
Wood wind
Mus.
,
the
flutes
and
reed
instruments
of
an
orchestra
,
collectively
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Wind
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Winded
;
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Winding
.]
1.
To
expose
to
the
wind
;
to
winnow
;
to
ventilate
.
2.
To
perceive
or
follow
by
the
scent
;
to
scent
;
to
nose
;
as
,
the
hounds
winded
the
game
.
3.
(a)
To
drive
hard
,
or
force
to
violent
exertion
,
as
a
horse
,
so
as
to
render
scant
of
wind
;
to
put
out
of
breath
.
(b)
To
rest
,
as
a
horse
,
in
order
to
allow
the
breath
to
be
recovered
;
to
breathe
.
To wind a ship
Naut.
,
to
turn
it
end
for
end
,
so
that
the
wind
strikes
it
on
the
opposite
side
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Wind
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Wound
R
.
Winded
;
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Winding
.]
To
blow
;
to
sound
by
blowing
;
esp
.,
to
sound
with
prolonged
and
mutually
involved
notes
.
“Hunters
who
wound
their
horns.”
Ye
vigorous
swains
,
while
youth
ferments
your
blood
, . . .
Wind
the
shrill
horn
. --
Pope
.
That
blast
was
winded
by
the
king
.
--
Sir
W
.
Scott
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
wind
n
1:
air
moving
(
sometimes
with
considerable
force
)
from
an
area
of
high
pressure
to
an
area
of
low
pressure
; "
trees
bent
under
the
fierce
winds
"; "
when
there
is
no
wind
,
row
";
"
the
radioactivity
was
being
swept
upwards
by
the
air
current
and
out
into
the
atmosphere
" [
syn
:
air current
,
current of air
]
2:
a
tendency
or
force
that
influences
events
; "
the
winds
of
change
"
3:
breath
; "
the
collision
knocked
the
wind
out
of
him
"
4:
empty
rhetoric
or
insincere
or
exaggerated
talk
; "
that's
a
lot
of
wind
"; "
don't
give
me
any
of
that
jazz
" [
syn
:
idle
words
,
jazz
,
nothingness
]
5:
an
indication
of
potential
opportunity
; "
he
got
a
tip
on
the
stock
market
"; "
a
good
lead
for
a
job
" [
syn
:
tip
,
lead
,
steer
,
confidential information
,
hint
]
6:
a
musical
instrument
in
which
the
sound
is
produced
by
an
enclosed
column
of
air
that
is
moved
by
the
breath
[
syn
:
wind
instrument
]
7:
a
reflex
that
expels
intestinal
gas
through
the
anus
[
syn
:
fart
,
farting
,
flatus
,
breaking wind
]
8:
the
act
of
winding
or
twisting
; "
he
put
the
key
in
the
old
clock
and
gave
it
a
good
wind
" [
syn
:
winding
,
twist
]
v
1:
to
move
or
cause
to
move
in
a
sinuous
,
spiral
,
or
circular
course
; "
the
river
winds
through
the
hills
"; "
the
path
meanders
through
the
vineyards
"; "
sometimes
,
the
gout
wanders
through
the
entire
body
" [
syn
:
weave
,
thread
,
meander
,
wander
]
2:
extend
in
curves
and
turns
; "
The
road
winds
around
the
lake
"
[
syn
:
curve
]
3:
wrap
or
coil
around
; "
roll
your
hair
around
your
finger
";
"
Twine
the
thread
around
the
spool
" [
syn
:
wrap
,
roll
,
twine
] [
ant
:
unwind
]
4:
catch
the
scent
of
;
get
wind
of
; "
The
dog
nosed
out
the
drugs
" [
syn
:
scent
,
nose
]
5:
coil
the
spring
of
(
some
mechanical
device
)
by
turning
a
stem
; "
wind
your
watch
" [
syn
:
wind up
]
6:
form
into
a
wreath
[
syn
:
wreathe
]
7:
raise
or
haul
up
with
or
as
if
with
mechanical
help
; "
hoist
the
bicycle
onto
the
roof
of
the
car
" [
syn
:
hoist
,
lift
]
[
also
:
wound
]
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