pylon
nounEtymology
Learned borrowing from Ancient Greek πυλών (pulṓn, “gateway”).
Definitions
A gateway to the inner part of an Ancient Egyptian temple.
A tower-like structure, usually one of a series, used to support high-voltage electricity…
A tower-like structure, usually one of a series, used to support high-voltage electricity cables.
- After two pylonless months, July's pylon comes all the way from the hills outside Wellington, New Zealand.
- These smaller pylons have might not possess the majesty of the giant 400 kV pylons, but they have a squat charm all of their own and 132 kV was the original voltage of the National Grid when it was rolled out in the 1920s.
A tall steel or concrete tower from which cables are strung.
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A lighting mast
A lighting mast; a freestanding support for floodlights.
A structure used to mount engines, missiles etc., to the underside of an aircraft wing or…
A structure used to mount engines, missiles etc., to the underside of an aircraft wing or fuselage.
A starting derrick for an aeroplane.
A post, tower, etc. as on an aerodrome, or flying ground, serving to bound or mark a…
A post, tower, etc. as on an aerodrome, or flying ground, serving to bound or mark a prescribed course of flight.
An obelisk.
- The Washington Monument is often described as an obelisk, and sometimes even as a “true obelisk,” even though it is not. A true obelisk is a monolith, a pylon formed out of a single piece of stone.
A traffic cone.
An orange marker designating one of the four corners of the end zone in American football.
An ineffective, useless player.
- The defensemen have been total pylons tonight!
- So I joined a rec league in October with no hockey experience and little skating experience. While its been fun, there is the problem that I continue to be a pylon.
- IMO the Nyquist, Pearson and Koeptke experiment is done. Put them on waivers and bring up the young lads. Lambert, Chibby and even Ford can provide some speed and youthful enthusiasm while contributing more than these pylons.
A rigid prosthesis for the lower leg.
- McKenzie uses a pylon for all above knee amputees, and orders a permanent leg when function merits it.
- During the early postoperative period, before the patient has a prosthesis, they may have a rigid dressing with a pylon.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for pylon. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA