Sprocket
Sponsored by Tom McClure Came first in group 173 in round 1 with 397 votesbeat Chutney on 187 votesbeat Dandelion on 171 votesbeat Smooth on 33 votes
Came first in group 44 in round 2 with 406 votesbeat Piglet on 196 votesbeat Slipstream on 68 votesbeat Gadget on 53 votes
Won in group 22 in round 3 with 479 votesbeat Thwart on 457 votes
Won in group 11 in round 4 with 700 votesbeat Succulent on 602 votes
Won in group 6 in round 5 with 841 votesbeat Gloaming on 679 votes
Lost in group 3 in round 6 with 524 votesbeaten by Cantankerous on 749 votes
English
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Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Unknown. First attested in the 16th century. Perhaps related to Italian rocchetto (“spool”), spoletta (“spool”), sprone (“spur”), or English spoke, spike, spur.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]sprocket (plural sprockets)
- (mechanical engineering) A toothed wheel that enmeshes with a chain or other perforated band.
- (usually in the plural) The tooth of such a wheel.
- (architecture) A flared extension at the base of a sloped roof.
- A placeholder name for an unnamed, unspecified, or hypothetical manufactured good or product.
- Synonym: widget
- Suppose we have a widget factory that produces 100 widgets per year, and a sprocket factory that produces 200 sprockets per year.
Usage notes
[edit]Although sprockets are sometimes referred to as gears, there is a technical distinction between the two: sprockets interact with chains, whereas gears interact with other gears.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]toothed wheel
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tooth of such wheel
extension of roof
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.