Jet JET, n. [L. gagates.] A solid, dry, black,inflammable fossil
substance, harder than asphalt, susceptible of a good polish, and
glossy in its fracture, which is conchoidal or undulating. It is found
not in strata or continued masses, but in unconnected heaps. It is
wrought into toys, buttons, mourning jewels, etc. Jet is regarded
as a variety of lignite, or coal originating in wood. JET,
n. [L. jactus.] 1. A spout, spouting or shooting of water; a jet
d'eau. 2. A yard. Tusser. Drift; scope. [Not in use or local.] JET, v.i. [See the Noun.] To shoot forward; to shoot out; to
project; to jut; to intrude. 1. To strut; to throw or toss the
body in haughtiness. 2. To jerk; to jolt; to be shaken. [This
orthography is rarely used. See Jut.]
jet
adj 1: of the blackest black; similar to the color of jet or
coal [syn: coal-black, jet, jet-black, pitchy,
sooty]
n 1: an airplane powered by one or more jet engines [syn: jet,
jet plane, jet-propelled plane]
2: the occurrence of a sudden discharge (as of liquid) [syn:
jet, squirt, spurt, spirt]
3: a hard black form of lignite that takes a brilliant polish
and is used in jewelry or ornamentation
4: atmospheric discharges (lasting 10 msec) bursting from the
tops of giant storm clouds in blue cones that widen as they
flash upward [syn: jet, blue jet, reverse lightning]
5: street names for ketamine [syn: K, jet, super acid,
special K, honey oil, green, cat valium, super C]
6: an artificially produced flow of water [syn: fountain,
jet]
v 1: issue in a jet; come out in a jet; stream or spring forth;
"Water jetted forth"; "flames were jetting out of the
building" [syn: jet, gush]
2: fly a jet plane
jet I. nounEtymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French jaiet, from
Latin gagates, from Greek gagatēs, from Gagas, town
and river in Asia Minor Date: 14th century 1. a compact
velvet-black coal that takes a good polish and is often used for jewelry
2. an intense black
II. adjectiveDate: 1658
of the color jet III. verb (jetted; jetting)
Etymology: French jeter, literally, to throw, from Old French,
from Latin jactare to throw, frequentative of jacere to throw;
akin to Greek hienai to send Date: 1692 intransitive
verb
to spout forth ;gushtransitive verb
to emit in a stream ;spoutIV. nounDate: circa 1696 1.a.(1) a usually forceful stream of fluid (as water or gas)
discharged from a narrow opening or a nozzle (2) a narrow stream
of material (as plasma) emanating or appearing to emanate from a celestial
object (as a radio galaxy)
b. a nozzle for a jet of fluid 2. something issuing
as if in a jet <talk poured from her in a brilliant jet —
Time> 3.a.jet engineb. an airplane powered by one or more
jet engines
4. a long narrow current of high-speed winds (as a jet stream)
• jetlikeadjectiveV. intransitive verb (jetted; jetting)
Date: 1949 1. to travel by jet airplane 2. to move
or progress by or as if by jet propulsion
jet 1. n. & v. --n. 1 a stream of water, steam, gas, flame, etc. shot out esp. from a small opening. 2 a spout or nozzle for emitting water etc. in this way. 3 a a jet engine.
b an aircraft powered by one or more jet engines. --v. (jetted, jetting) 1 intr. spurt out in jets. 2 tr. & intr. colloq. send or travel by jet plane. Phrases and idioms: jet
engine an engine using jet propulsion for forward thrust, esp. of an aircraft. jet lag extreme tiredness and other bodily effects felt after a long flight involving marked differences of local time.
jet-propelled 1 having jet propulsion. 2 (of a person etc.) very fast. jet propulsion propulsion by the backward ejection of a high-speed jet of gas etc. jet set colloq. wealthy people
frequently travelling by air, esp. for pleasure. jet-setter colloq. a member of the jet set. jet stream 1 a narrow current of very strong winds encircling the globe several miles above the
earth. 2 the stream from a jet engine. Etymology: earlier as verb (in sense 1): F jeter throw ult. f. L jactare frequent. of jacere jact- throw 2. n. 1 a a hard black
variety of lignite capable of being carved and highly polished. b (attrib.) made of this. 2 (in full jet-black) a deep glossy black colour. Etymology: ME f. AF geet, OF jaiet f. L gagates
f. Gk gagates f. Gagai in Asia Minor
jet
(jets, jetting, jetted)Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1. A jet is an aircraft that is powered by jet engines.
Her private jet landed in the republic on the way to Japan...He had arrived from Jersey by jet.N-COUNT: also by Nsee alsojump jet
2. If you jet somewhere, you travel there in a fast plane.
He and his wife, Val, will be jetting off on a two-week holiday in America...VERB: V adv/prep
3. A jet of liquid or gas is a strong, fast, thin stream of it.
A jet of water poured through the windows.N-COUNT: oft N of n
4. Jet is a hard black stone that is used in jewellery.
N-UNCOUNT
Jet
a hard, black, bituminous lignite, capable of an excellent
polish and easily carved, hence useful for trinkets and ornaments, which
have been made of it from very early times; is found in France, Spain,
and Saxony, but the best supplies come from Whitby, Yorkshire.
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Jet \Jet\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Jetted; p. pr. & vb. n.
Jetting.] [F. jeter, L. jactare, freq. fr. jacere to throw.
See 3d Jet, and cf. Jut.]
1. To strut; to walk with a lofty or haughty gait; to be
insolent; to obtrude. [Obs.]
he jets under his advanced plumes! --Shak.
To jet upon a prince's right. --Shak.
2. To jerk; to jolt; to be shaken. [Obs.] --Wiseman.
3. To shoot forward or out; to project; to jut out.
Jet \Jet\, n. [OF. jet, jayet, F. ja["i]et, jais, L. gagates,
fr. Gr. ?; -- so called from ? or ?, a town and river in
Lycia.] [written also jeat, jayet.] (Min.)
A variety of lignite, of a very compact texture and velvet
black color, susceptible of a good polish, and often wrought
into mourning jewelry, toys, buttons, etc. Formerly called
also black amber.
Jet ant (Zo["o]l.), a blackish European ant ({Formica
fuliginosa}), which builds its nest of a paperlike
material in the trunks of trees.
Jet \Jet\, n. [F. jet, OF. get, giet, L. jactus a throwing, a
throw, fr. jacere to throw. Cf. Abject, Ejaculate,
Gist, Jess, Jut.]
1. A shooting forth; a spouting; a spurt; a sudden rush or
gush, as of water from a pipe, or of flame from an
orifice; also, that which issues in a jet.
2. Drift; scope; range, as of an argument. [Obs.]
3. The sprue of a type, which is broken from it when the type
is cold. --Knight.
Jet propeller (Naut.), a device for propelling vessels by
means of a forcible jet of water ejected from the vessel,
as by a centrifugal pump.
Jet pump, a device in which a small jet of steam, air,
water, or other fluid, in rapid motion, lifts or otherwise
moves, by its impulse, a larger quantity of the fluid with
which it mingles.
Jet, OK (town, FIPS 38000)
Location: 36.66676 N, 98.18071 W
Population (1990): 272 (164 housing units)
Area: 0.8 sq km (land), 0.0 sq km (water)
Zip code(s): 73749
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