shuttle - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
A weaving shuttle.
From a merger of two words:
- Middle English shutel, shotel, schetel, schettell, schyttyl, scutel (“bar; bolt”), from Old English sċyttel, sċutel (“bar; bolt”), equivalent to shut + -le
- Middle English shutel, schetil, shotil, shetel, schootyll, shutyll, schytle, scytyl (“missile; projectile; spear”), from Old English sċytel, sċutel (“dart, arrow”), from Proto-Germanic *skutilaz.
The name for a loom weaving instrument, recorded from 1338, is from a sense of being "shot" across the threads. The back-and-forth imagery inspired the extension to "passenger trains" in 1895, aircraft in 1942, and spacecraft in 1969, as well as older terms such as shuttlecock.
shuttle (plural shuttles)
- (weaving) A tool used to carry the woof back and forth between the warp threads on a loom.
- 1638, George Sandys, A Paraphrase upon Job:
Like shuttles through the loom, so swiftly glide
My feather'd hours, and all my hopes deride!. - 2013 November 11, Claus-Dieter Brauns, “Food and Clothing”, in Mru: Hill People on the Border of Bangladesh[1], Basel: Birkhäuser, page 131:
By placing the sword edgewise, the weaver keeps the countershed open, in order to shoot through the shuttle.
- 1638, George Sandys, A Paraphrase upon Job:
- The sliding thread holder in a sewing machine, which carries the lower thread through a loop of the upper thread, to make a lock stitch.
- A transport service (such as a bus or train) that goes back and forth between two or more places.
The shuttle bus runs to the airport on a half-hourly basis from the central station.- 2012, Andrew Martin, Underground Overground: A passenger's history of the Tube, Profile Books, →ISBN, pages 76, 77:
And until December 2010 the northern stretch of the 'Extension' featured a charming side-show: the Chesham Shuttle. [...] But the people of Chesham moaned about the shuttle: the waiting room at Chalfont & Latimer was too hot, or too cold; there were leaves on the line. [...] On 12 Dec 2010 the shuttle ceased operations and Metropolitan trains began to terminate at both Amersham and Chesham.
- 2012, Andrew Martin, Underground Overground: A passenger's history of the Tube, Profile Books, →ISBN, pages 76, 77:
- Such a transport vehicle; a shuttle bus; a space shuttle.
- 2004, Dawn of the Dead, 1:14:20:
You're saying we take the parking shuttles, reinforce them with aluminum siding and then head to the gun store where our friend Andy plays some cowboy-movie, jump-on-the-wagon bullshit.
- 2004, Dawn of the Dead, 1:14:20:
- Any other item that moves repeatedly back and forth between two positions, possibly transporting something else with it between those points (such as, in chemistry, a molecular shuttle).
- A shuttlecock.
- A shutter, as for a channel for molten metal.
In its original sense, a shuttle goes back and forth between two places. The term is also used in a broader sense for short-haul transport that may be one-way or have multiple stops (including shared ride or loop), particularly for airport buses; compare loose usage of limousine. It is also often used to describe a rail replacement bus service, or a rail service that does not run the full length of the normal route forcing passengers to transfer, regardless of the number of stops.
transport service
- Arabic: مَكُوك m (makūk)
- Belarusian: чаўно́к m (čawnók), чо́ўнік m (čównik), шатл m (šatl) (also space)
- Bengali: শাটল (śaṭol)
- Bulgarian: сова́лка (bg) f (soválka), ша́тъл m (šátǎl)
- Burmese: လွန်းပြန် (my) (lwan:pran)
- Catalan: llançadora (ca) f
- Chinese:
Mandarin: (plane) 穿梭班機 / 穿梭班机 (chuānsuō bānjī), (bus) 班車 / 班车 (zh) (bānchē) - Dutch: pendelbus (nl) m
- Finnish: sukkula (fi), sukkulalinja
- French: navette (fr) f
- Galician: lanzadeira f
- Georgian: მაქო (ka) (mako), შატლი (šaṭli)
- German: Pendelverkehr (de) m, (bus) Shuttlebus m
- Hindi: शटल f (śaṭal)
- Hungarian: ingajárat (hu)
- Icelandic: skutla f
- Ido: naveto (io)
- Italian: navetta (it) f
- Japanese: シャトル (ja) (shatoru)
- Korean: 셔틀 (ko) (syeoteul)
- Māori: waka kōpiko
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: skytteltrafikk m - Persian:
Iranian Persian: شاتِل (šâtel) - Portuguese: traslado (pt) m
- Romanian: navetă (ro) f
- Russian: челно́к (ru) m (čelnók), челно́чный тра́нспорт m (čelnóčnyj tránsport), шаттл (ru) m (šattl) (also space)
- Spanish: lanzadera (es) f, bus de cortesía m, autobús de enlace m, autobús enlazador m
- Swedish: skyttelbuss (sv) c, skytteltrafik (sv) c
- Thai: กระสวย (th) (grà-sǔai)
- Ukrainian: чо́вник m (čóvnyk), шаттл m (šattl) (also space)
- Urdu: شَٹَل f (śaṭal)
- Welsh: gwennol f
shuttle (third-person singular simple present shuttles, present participle shuttling, simple past and past participle shuttled)
- (intransitive, transitive) To go or send back and forth between two places.
- 1982 April 24, Larry Goldsmith, “Freedom of Information: A Heterosexual Privilege?”, in Gay Community News, page 6:
On several occasions during the next several months my attempts to see the logs were met alternately with this denial of their existence or a denial of my right to see them. After being shuttled from station to headquarters and headquarters to station, I finally consulted with _GCN_s attorney, John Ward.
- 1982 April 24, Larry Goldsmith, “Freedom of Information: A Heterosexual Privilege?”, in Gay Community News, page 6:
- (transitive) To transport by shuttle or by means of a shuttle service.
Synonym: chauffeur
Guests can be shuttled to and from the hotel for no extra cost.
Borrowed from English shuttle.
shuttle m (plural shuttles, diminutive shuttletje n)
- a space shuttle
Synonyms: ruimteveer, ruimtependel - a shuttlecock, shuttle
Synonyms: pluimbal, vederbal - a shuttle bus
Synonym: pendelbus
shuttle m (invariable)
space shuttle
Synonym: navetta spaziale^ shuttle in Luciano Canepari, Dizionario di Pronuncia Italiana (DiPI)