different between safety vs odorant
safety
English
Etymology
From Old French sauveté, from earlier salvetet, from Medieval Latin salvitas, salvitatem, from Latin salvus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?se?fti/
Noun
safety (countable and uncountable, plural safeties)
- The condition or feeling of being safe; security; certainty.
- If you push it to the limit, safety is not guaranteed.
- (mechanics) A mechanism on a weapon or dangerous equipment designed to prevent accidental firing.
- Be sure that the safety is set before proceeding.
- (American football) An instance of a player being sacked or tackled in the end zone, or stepping out of the end zone and off the field, resulting in two points to the opposite team.
- He sacked the quarterback in the end zone for a safety.
- (American football) Any of the defensive players who are in position furthest from the line of scrimmage and whose responsibility is to defend against passes as well as to be the tacklers of last resort.
- The free safety made a game-saving tackle on the runner who had broken past the linebackers.
- (baseball) A safety squeeze.
- 1952, Bernard Malamud, The Natural, Time Life Books, 1966, p. 225,[1]
- Boy wondered about that bunt. He had a notion Fowler would commit himself soon because time was on the go. But Fowler didn’t, making it another sweep of three Pirates. He had thus far given up only two safeties.
- 1952, Bernard Malamud, The Natural, Time Life Books, 1966, p. 225,[1]
- Preservation from escape; close custody.
- c. 1596, William Shakespeare, King John, Act IV, Scene 2[2]
- […] imprison him, […] / Deliver him to safety; and return,
- c. 1596, William Shakespeare, King John, Act IV, Scene 2[2]
- (dated) A safety bicycle.
- 1897, American Architect and Architecture (volumes 57-58, page 51)
- Many wheelmen and wheelwomen, riding safeties, tandems and tricycles, stopped there during the evening and we had good opportunity for comparing American and English bicycles […]
- 1897, American Architect and Architecture (volumes 57-58, page 51)
Antonyms
- danger
Derived terms
Related terms
- safe
Translations
See also
- security
- secure
Verb
safety (third-person singular simple present safeties, present participle safetying, simple past and past participle safetied)
- (transitive) To secure (a mechanical component, as in aviation) to keep it from becoming detached even under vibration.
- to secure a firing pin, as in guns, to keep the gun from firing
- 2011 Time Crime, page 92
- Time went back to normal for him; he safetied his own weapon and dropped it, jumping forward.
- 2012 Blowout, page 343
- Osborne lay propped up on one elbow, his pistol cocked, his aim wavering in the general direction the man had gone. Finally he safetied it, stuffed it in the holster on his right hip, and reached for his cell phone in his jacket pocket. But it was gone.
- 2011 Time Crime, page 92
safety From the web:
- what safety standard was implemented by david
- what safety features are available on automobiles
- what safety month is november
- what safety demands are placed on a tire
- what safety means to me
- what safety month is october
- what safety training is required by osha
- what safety month is december
odorant
English
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Alternative forms
- odourant
Noun
odorant (plural odorants)
- Any substance that has a distinctive smell, especially one added to something (such as household gas) for safety purposes
Translations
Adjective
odorant
- Having an odour/odor.
Derived terms
- deodorant
- reodorant
Anagrams
- donator, tandoor, tornado
French
Etymology
From Latin odorantem
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?.d?.???/
Adjective
odorant (feminine singular odorante, masculine plural odorants, feminine plural odorantes)
- scented, aromatic
Derived terms
- acore odorant
Further reading
- “odorant” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Latin
Verb
od?rant
- third-person plural present active indicative of od?r?
Romanian
Etymology
From French odorant.
Adjective
odorant m or n (feminine singular odorant?, masculine plural odoran?i, feminine and neuter plural odorante)
- odorous, odoriferous
Declension
odorant From the web:
- what odorant is added to natural gas
- what odorant is added to propane
- what odorant meaning
- what do odorants stimulate
- what are odorant receptors
- what do odorant molecules bind to
- what do odorants bind to
- what are odorant molecules
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