fulcrum
noun/ˈfʊlkɹəm/US/ˈfʊlkɹəm/
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin fulcrum (“bedpost, foot of a couch”), from fulciō (“prop up, support”).
- borrowed from fulcrum
Definitions
The support about which a lever pivots.
- It is possible to flick food across the table using your fork as a lever and your finger as a fulcrum.
- MILDRED: Archimedes said give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it and I will move the world. CHARLOTTE: Yeah she said that twaddle eight or nine times.
- A doorknob of whatever roundish shape is effectively a continuum of levers, with the axis of the latching mechanism—known as the spindle—being the fulcrum about which the turning takes place.
A crux or pivot
A crux or pivot; a central point.
- By this point the fulcrum of concern is the stuprum of men upon men, described as more prevalent than that upon women.
- Chelsea's Mason Mount is a top-class talent while West Ham midfielder Declan Rice has moved his game on to another level this season and will be the fulcrum of England's midfield this summer.
NATO code name for the Soviet MiG-29 aircraft.
The neighborhood
- neighborfulcral
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for fulcrum. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA