What is another word for the shaft?

Pronunciation: [ðə ʃˈaft] (IPA)

The shaft is a versatile word, referring to a long, narrow object or passage in various contexts. There are many synonyms for this word, each with their own nuances. In mining, the shaft is replaced by terms such as mine tunnel, drift, gallery, crosscut, and adit. In architecture, shafts are also called pillars, columns, or posts. In mechanics, a shaft can be associated with an axis or pivot. Similarly, in anatomy, the shaft refers to the long cylindrical part of a bone, as in the humerus and femur. As such, the synonyms for the shaft include anything long, slim, and tubular, from pipes and rods to columns and supports.

What are the hypernyms for The shaft?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with The shaft

  • When I jerked it out the head remained in my leg, where it remains still. There were a couple of inches of blood on the shaft of the arrow when I pulled it out.
    George Crook
  • The peace that passeth understanding is that which comes when the pain is not relieved, which subsists in the midst of the painful situation, suffusing it, which springs out of the pain itself, which shimmers on the crest of the wave of pain, which is the spear of frustration transfigured into the shaft of light. It is upon those we love that we must anchor ourselves spiritually in the last moments. The sense of interconnectedness with them stands out vividly by way of contrast at the very moment when our mortal connection with them is about to be dissolved. And the intertwining of our life with theirs, the living in the life that is in them, is but a part of our living in the infinite manifold of the spiritual life. The thought of this, as apprehended, not in terms of knowledge, but in immediate experience, begets the peace that passeth understanding. And it is upon the bosom of that peace that we can pass safely out of the realm of time and space.
    Felix Adler
  • Indignant Man resumes the shaft he gave, Disarms the tyrant, and unbinds the slave, Displays the unclad skeleton of kings, Spectres of power, and serpents without stings.
    Joel Barlow
  • A long bow and a strong bow, and let the sky grow dark! The cord to the nock, the shaft to the ear, and the king of Koth for a mark!
    Robert E. Howard
  • That eagle's fate and mine are one, Which on the shaft that made him die Espied a feather of his own, Wherewith he wont to soar so high.
    Edmund Waller

Word of the Day

non-derivable
The word "non-derivable" refers to something that cannot be obtained through logical deduction or inference. Its antonyms include terms like "deducible," "inferable," and "derivabl...