Mechanical vs Gearwork - What's the difference?
mechanical | gearwork |
Characteristic of someone who does manual labour for a living; coarse, vulgar.
*, I.43:
Related to mechanics (the branch of physics that deals with forces acting on mass).
Related to mechanics (the design and construction of machines).
Done by machine.
Using mechanics (the design and construction of machines): being a machine.
As if performed by a machine: lifeless or mindless.
(of a person) Acting as if one were a machine: lifeless or mindless.
*, chapter=15
, title= (informal) Handy with machines.
A mechanical assembly of gears.
*{{quote-news, year=2007, date=October 3, author=John Schwartz, title=Texas Man Linked to Past and Future of Space Exploration by Sputnik and Soyuz, work=New York Times
, passage=He shows it all off with a child’s delight, relishing the technical details of objects like automatons, the gearwork devices that were precursors to robots; a navigational sphere, a handheld planetarium projector used on Russian space missions to align the capsule visually; and a sextant used by the Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackleton. }}
As an adjective mechanical
is characteristic of someone who does manual labour for a living; coarse, vulgar.As a noun gearwork is
a mechanical assembly of gears.mechanical
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- all manner of silks were already become so vile and abject, that was any man seene to weare them, he was presently judged to be some countrie fellow, or mechanicall man.
The Mirror and the Lamp, passage=Edward Churchill still attended to his work in a hopeless mechanical manner like a sleep-walker who walks safely on a well-known round. But his Roman collar galled him, his cossack stifled him, his biretta was as uncomfortable as a merry-andrew's cap and bells.}}
Derived terms
* electromechanical * mechanical erasure * mechanicality * mechanically * mechanicalness * mechanical pencil * postmechanical * premechanicalgearwork
English
Noun
(-)citation