shaft
Americannoun
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a long pole forming the body of various weapons, as lances, halberds, or arrows.
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something directed or barbed as in sharp attack.
shafts of sarcasm.
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a ray or beam.
a shaft of sunlight.
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a long, comparatively straight handle serving as an important or balancing part of an implement or device, as of a hammer, ax, golf club, or other implement.
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Machinery. a rotating or oscillating round, straight bar for transmitting motion and torque, usually supported on bearings and carrying gears, wheels, or the like, as a propeller shaft on a ship, or a drive shaft of an engine.
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a flagpole.
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Architecture.
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that part of a column or pier between the base and capital.
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any distinct, slender, vertical masonry feature engaged in a wall or pier and usually supporting or feigning to support an arch or vault.
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a monument in the form of a column, obelisk, or the like.
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either of the parallel bars of wood between which the animal drawing a vehicle is hitched.
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any well-like passage or vertical enclosed space, as in a building.
an elevator shaft.
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Mining. a vertical or sloping passageway leading to the surface.
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Botany. the trunk of a tree.
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Zoology. the main stem or midrib of a feather.
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Also called leaf. Textiles. the harness or warp with reference to the pattern of interlacing threads in weave constructions (usually used in combination).
an eight-shaft satin.
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the part of a candelabrum that supports the branches.
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Slang: Vulgar. the penis.
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Slang: harsh, unfair, or treacherous treatment.
I feel like he’s giving me the shaft.
verb (used with object)
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to push or propel with a pole.
to shaft a boat through a tunnel.
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Slang. to treat in a harsh, unfair, or treacherous manner.
noun
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the long narrow pole that forms the body of a spear, arrow, etc
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something directed at a person in the manner of a missile
shafts of sarcasm
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a ray, beam, or streak, esp of light
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a rod or pole forming the handle of a hammer, axe, golf club, etc
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a revolving rod that transmits motion or power: usually used of axial rotation Compare rod
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one of the two wooden poles by which an animal is harnessed to a vehicle
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anatomy
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the middle part (diaphysis) of a long bone
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the main portion of any elongated structure or part
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the middle part of a column or pier, between the base and the capital
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a column, obelisk, etc, esp one that forms a monument
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architect a column that supports a vaulting rib, sometimes one of a set
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a vertical passageway through a building, as for a lift
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a vertical passageway into a mine
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ornithol the central rib of a feather
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an archaic or literary word for arrow
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slang to be tricked or cheated
verb
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slang to have sexual intercourse with (a woman)
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slang to trick or cheat
Other Word Forms
Etymology
Origin of shaft
First recorded before 1000; Middle English; Old English sceaft; cognate with German Schaft; compare Latin scāpus “shaft,” Greek skêptron scepter
Explanation
The noun shaft refers to something that resembles a long, thin pole, such as the long part of an arrow between the tip and the feathers. The word shaft can describe all kinds of things that are long and thin, such a shaft of light or a spear or the handle of a golf club or the midsection of a long bone. A shaft can also be a long narrow tunnel, generally one that runs straight up and down, such as a mine shaft or an elevator shaft. You might think these items don’t have much in common, but think about their shape: they’re all long, straight, and thin.
Vocabulary lists containing shaft
The SAT: Multiple-Meaning Words, List 7
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The New SAT: Multiple-Meaning Words
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The ACT Reading Test: Multiple-Meaning Words, List 3
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Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
As unthinkable as it now seems, the role of John Shaft, paragon of movie star Black masculinity, was very nearly cast as a white character.
From New York Times • Oct. 26, 2023
The blaxploitation actor starred in the 1971 "Shaft" film series that depicted Roundtree's iconic character John Shaft, a private detective with a brown leather jacket with a turned-up collar and a dark mustache.
From Salon • Oct. 25, 2023
When he took up the mantle of Harlem detective John Shaft for the 2000 action reboot “Shaft,” Samuel L.
From Los Angeles Times • Oct. 24, 2023
Samuel L Jackson, who appeared in the 2000 Shaft reboot as well as an 2019 instalment of the franchise with Roundtree, described the late actor as "the prototype, the best to ever do it".
From BBC • Oct. 24, 2023
Up into the Shaft of the Dead Man.
From "The Truth as Told by Mason Buttle" by Leslie Connor
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.