fusee
Noun

fusee (plural fusees)

  1. A conical, grooved pulley in early clocks.
  2. 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.
  3. A fuse for an explosive.
  4. (US) A colored flare used as a warning on the railroad.
  5. A fusil, or flintlock musket.
Noun

fusee (plural fusees)

  1. The track of a buck.
Noun

fusee (plural fusees)

  1. 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.



This text is extracted from the Wiktionary and it is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy 0.002
Offline English dictionary