释义 |
noun ˈtʌɪəˈtaɪr 1A rubber covering, typically inflated or surrounding an inflated inner tube, placed round a wheel to form a soft contact with the road. 轮胎 Example sentencesExamples - A dozen men in camouflage mill around the wooden supports and rubber tires lining the road that make up the checkpoint.
- I do think that the problem with the road tires was primarily the high pressure.
- By the time you're up to 100 mph it's like you have a baby elephant sitting on the roof, pressing the tyres into the road.
- Nevertheless, bear in mind that before you run your motorcycles, tires must be properly inflated.
- In situations where you would expect understeer on street tyres, the sticky rubber endows the front end with amazing grip.
- We know that tires are made of rubber, therefore, are susceptible to punctures, peeling and the likes.
- While you cannot constantly watch over your drivers, you can reduce the risk of them taking to the roads on unsafe tyres by employing a tyre-fitting service.
- Instead of an inner tube the tyre has a rubber lining and the pressure of the beading against the rim of the wheel is claimed to give a seal which is proof against any escape of air.
- Bicycles still have rubber, inflatable tyres, wheels with spokes, drop handlebars and narrow saddles.
- And Road Traffic Accident statistics show that 86% of tyres are not properly inflated.
- His solution was to adopt an Arte Povera-type approach, working principally in discarded rubber tyres and inner tubes.
- The shocks absorber setting allows maximum contact between the tire and the road surface.
- As the only part of a car actually in contact with the road, the tyre is the single most important item when it comes to controlling the vehicle's behaviour.
- Add more and you just get grey noise, like the rush of water in your ears when you hold your head under water or the sound of rubber tyres on the concrete roads they sometimes put down to save money.
- Road tires stick better in corners, roll more effortlessly and don't make that knobby buzz.
- There is an advantage, but not necessarily due to the actual contact patch of the tire.
- Make sure that that the tires are properly inflated to avoid misfortunes on the road.
- Remarkably it also offered no wheel spin on violent acceleration, although it would be a different matter in the wet with the road legal track tyres fitted.
- The Rascal is a tracked vehicle with six double road wheels with rubber tyres on each side.
- Make sure your Ford wheels are properly aligned and your tires are well inflated.
- 1.1 A strengthening band of metal fitted around the rim of a wheel, especially of a railway vehicle.
轮箍 Example sentencesExamples - The derailed train cars were carrying tires and mixed merchandise.
- One problem the team had to overcome was that zinc oxide, which is an essential component of the tires, disrupts the coupling process.
- These vehicles are not Hi-Rail equipped but do have a steel flange fastened on the inside of the tires.
Derivativesadjective in combination a rubber-tyred vehicle
OriginLate 15th century (denoting the curved pieces of iron plate with which carriage wheels were formerly shod): perhaps a variant of archaic tire, shortening of attire (because the tyre was the ‘clothing’ of the wheel). In the past wheelwrights strengthened the outside of the wheels of carts with curved pieces of iron plate called the tire, probably a shortened form of attire (an ME word originally meaning to put in order), because the tyre was the ‘clothing’ of the wheel. Originally the spellings tire and tyre were interchangeable, but in the 17th century tire became the settled spelling, which has remained the spelling in the USA. In Britain the development of the pneumatic tyre seemed to require some differentiation from the metal rim, and tyre was revived.
Rhymesacquire, admire, afire, applier, aspire, attire, ayah, backfire, barbwire, bemire, briar, buyer, byre, choir, conspire, crier, cryer, defier, denier, desire, dire, drier, dryer, dyer, enquire, entire, esquire, expire, fire, flyer, friar, fryer, Gaia, gyre, hellfire, hire, hiya, ire, Isaiah, jambalaya, Jeremiah, Josiah, Kintyre, latria, liar, lyre, Maia, Maya, Mayer, messiah, mire, misfire, Nehemiah, Obadiah, papaya, pariah, peripeteia, perspire, playa, Praia, prior, pyre, quire, replier, scryer, shire, shyer, sire, skyer, Sophia, spire, squire, supplier, Surabaya, suspire, tier, tire, transpire, trier, tumble-dryer, Uriah, via, wire, Zechariah, Zedekiah, Zephaniah proper nounˈtʌɪəˈtaɪr A port on the Mediterranean in southern Lebanon; population 41,800 (est. 2009). Founded in the 2nd millennium BC as a colony of Sidon, it was for centuries a Phoenician port and trading centre. proper nounˈtīrˈtaɪr A port on the Mediterranean Sea in southern Lebanon; population 41,800 (est. 2009). Founded in the 2nd millennium BC as a colony of Sidon, it was for centuries a Phoenician port and trading center. |