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skid |
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skid 1. Chiefly US and Canadian one of the logs forming a skidway 2. a support on which heavy objects may be stored and moved short distances by sliding 3. a shoe or drag used to apply pressure to the metal rim of a wheel to act as a brake skid [skid] (aerospace engineering) The metal bar or runner used as part of the landing gear of helicopters and planes. (engineering) A device attached to a chain and placed under a wheel to prevent its turning when descending a steep hill. A timber, bar, rail, or log placed under a heavy object when it is being moved over bare ground. A wood or metal platform support on wheels, legs, or runners used for handling and moving material. Also known as skid platform. (mechanical engineering) A brake for a power machine. (mining engineering) An arrangement upon which certain coal-cutting machines travel along the working faces. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| found itself fending off an angry Wall Street money manager after the Manhattan Beach shoe manufacturer announced that its business was hitting the skids. This 8760 sold in August just as the market was hitting the skids. Take the bluesy show-stopper ``Bill,'' which the banished, mixed-race Julie (Valarie Pettiford) sings just before hitting the skids in Chicago. |
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