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Machine   /məʃˈin/   Listen
Machine

noun
1.
Any mechanical or electrical device that transmits or modifies energy to perform or assist in the performance of human tasks.
2.
An efficient person.
3.
An intricate organization that accomplishes its goals efficiently.
4.
A device for overcoming resistance at one point by applying force at some other point.  Synonym: simple machine.
5.
A group that controls the activities of a political party.  Synonym: political machine.
6.
A motor vehicle with four wheels; usually propelled by an internal combustion engine.  Synonyms: auto, automobile, car, motorcar.
verb
(past & past part. machined; pres. part. machining)
1.
Turn, shape, mold, or otherwise finish by machinery.
2.
Make by machinery.



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"Machine" Quotes from Famous Books



... Easter week Seymour Austin went to Mount Laurels for rest, at an express invitation from Colonel Halkett. The working barrister, who is also a working member of Parliament, is occasionally reminded that this mortal machine cannot adapt itself in perpetuity to the long hours of labour by night in the House of Commons as well as by day in the Courts, which would seem to have been arranged by a compliant country for the purpose of aiding his particular, and most honourable, ambition to climb, while continuing to fill ...
— The Shaving of Shagpat • George Meredith

... coeffee a ravir aujourd'hui? C'est que monsieur vient d'assister a la toilette de madame." The Swiss bowed, and said nothing. The bow was to his master, not to me, and it was a bow of duty, not of inclination. I never saw a man look so like a machine; he did not even raise his eyes upon me or my coeffure as ...
— Tales And Novels, Vol. 8 • Maria Edgeworth

... engaged in a hundred trades, professions, and occupations unknown in 1790. The great corporations, mills, factories, mines, railroads, the steamboats, rapid transit, the telegraph, the telephone, the typewriter, the sewing machine, the automobile, the postal delivery service, the police and fire departments, the banks and trust companies, the department stores, and scores of other inventions and business institutions of great cities, now giving employment to millions of human beings, ...
— A Brief History of the United States • John Bach McMaster

... one good effect: it dragged them forcibly from the old path of indolence and routine and compelled them to think and calculate regarding their affairs. The hereditary listlessness and apathy, the traditional habit of looking on the estate with its serfs as a kind of self-acting machine which must always spontaneously supply the owner with the means of living, the inveterate practice of spending all ready money and of taking little heed for the morrow—all this, with much that resulted from it, was rudely swept away and became a ...
— Russia • Donald Mackenzie Wallace

... exercise might have sprung in some measure from internal and indescribable sensations. To all Antommarchi's medical prescriptions, he opposed the like determination. "Doctor," he said (14th October 1820), "no physicking; we are a machine made to live; we are organised for that purpose, and such is our nature; do not counteract the living principle—let it alone—leave it the liberty of self-defence—it will do better than your drugs. Our body is a watch, intended to go for a given time. The watchmaker ...
— The History of Napoleon Buonaparte • John Gibson Lockhart


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