rotor

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A rotating part of a mechanical device; for example, in an electric motor, generator, alternator, or pump.
  2. In a disc brake, the metal disc attached to the wheel hub.
  3. The wing of a helicopter or other rotary-wing aircraft.
  4. A type of powerful horizontal-axis atmospheric vortex generated by the interaction of strong winds with mountainous terrain.
  5. A quantity having magnitude, direction, and position.
  6. The set of cells within an oscillator that switch between being alive and dead over the course of the oscillator's period.
  7. An amusement park and carnival ride consisting of a rotating cylindrical chamber in which centrifugal force adheres riders to the wall as the floor drops away, creating a sensation of defying gravity.

Pronunciation

/ˈɹəʊ.tə/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-rotor.wav /ˈɹoʊ.tɚ/ /ˈɹoʊ.tə/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Wodencafe-rotor.wav

Word forms

rotor rotors

Etymology

From an irregular clipping of rotator, originally in mathematics, coined by English mathematician and philosopher William Kingdon Clifford based on vector, see quotations. Doublet of rota and ruote.

Related words

Translations

Arabic: عَمُود نَاقِل الْحَرَكَة Basque: errotore Bulgarian: ротор Chinese Mandarin: 轉子 /转子 Czech: rotor Finnish: roottori Finnish: pyörijä French: rotor German: Rotor Greek: δρομέας Italian: rotore Japanese: ローター Japanese: 回転子 Macedonian: ротор Māori: paetāwhirowhiro Norwegian: rotor Polish: wirnik Polish: rotor Portuguese: rotor Romanian: rotor Russian: ро́тор Serbo-Croatian: ротор Serbo-Croatian: rotor Spanish: rotor Tagalog: painog Ukrainian: ро́тор
This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.