DictionaryForumContacts

Google | Forvo | +

contraption

[kən'træpʃ(ə)n] n
gen. artilugio m
 English thesaurus
contraption [kən'træpʃ(ə)n] n
inf. a device or machine that looks awkward or old-fashioned, especially one that you do not know how to use (What's that strange contraption in the garage? cambridge.org); an awkward or old-fashioned looking device or machine (The entire contraption is not only cumbersome, but also often internally contradictory. cambridge.orgAn alderman bought the house, cheaply in view of the unusual charge, and promptly called in experts to inspect the contraption.If you see a guy who’s always filthy and mucking about with some loud, old contraption, I can see how you might assume that guy has some clue what he’s doing.); a piece of equipment or machinery that looks funny, strange, and unlikely to work well (It's a contraption for washing windows on tall buildings. ldoceonline.comThe lave net was a simple but very effective contraption for catching salmon.Early cameras were large and expensive contraptions.Above all, why were these chaps messing around with helium-filled contraptions, in an age of routine rocketry?By demonstrating his floating contraption - part surfboard, part kayak and part sailboard - Halfon hopes to create a tide of attention.Show him you are sensitive to his needs with a gift certificate to that utopia of contraptions, Sharper Image.He must negotiate puzzles, spring boards, buttons and other contraptions laying in his path.No one place in the contraption governs walking.After which Nakki, to my delight, hailed an auto-rickshaw. Seven of us squeezed into this contraption, which wheezed along at about ten miles an hour, coughing blue fumes. There was a good deal of price hagghng before we got in and a httle more at journey’s end.The steam engine is an unthinkable contraption without the domesticating loop of the revolving governor.); machine or device that appears strange or unnecessarily complicated, and often badly made or unsafe (repairing stereos and making contraptions out of spare electronic bits lexico.comThere are the flying machines and steam contraptions, technology from a fantastic version of the industrial age.You find strange contraptions made of rubber and metal lying around in the basement.Neither of them wore gear and they were using some sort of strange cardboard contraptions as nets but they were wearing skates and they had sticks in their hands.For example, the machines might resemble the contraptions used by the state lottery agencies to determine winning numbers.It was at least twice as big as a normal airplane hangar, with strange looking contraptions flying about.Giant machines and preternatural contraptions can dominate the landscape.His shoes were strange contraptions bound in metal strips and leather ties.Also displayed are two power-gliders, which are two-seater contraptions powered by small engines.People taking rides on giant wheels and similar contraptions should be warned that they are taking a risk.Sadly, none of a myriad of ingenious contraptions, despite inventors' claims, puts forth more energy than it absorbs.Fruit machines used to be pretty simple contraptions, but you'd need a mathematics degree to operate them these days.At first, you might think that writing about mechanical contraptions could end up being an extremely boring and dry endeavour.Undoubtedly the contraptions and apparatuses in Keaton's films are the basis for his gags.The mechanised contraption rattled its way over the rolling hills.The noisy contraption of an elevator stopped once it reached the bottom of the shaft.Some of his contraptions do not have steering wheels and he still calls them cars .No longer the wooden contraptions of yore, they are powered by large diesel sets.It took old-fashioned rocket science to put the contraption into orbit on September 27 last year.Bodies were needed to carry the contraption, for it had no wheels.A flood light granted sight to the strangest mechanical contraption any of them had ever seen.); a machine that is complicated and precarious (wiktionary.org)
ironic., disappr. a device or contrivance, esp one considered strange, unnecessarily intricate, or improvised (often facetious or derogatory • The batteries go in a backpack, the motors sit outside her legs, and the whole contraption is expensive. collinsdictionary.comThe gold medallist is only a tad higher up than the others and the whole contraption's only a few inches tall.); any object (figuratively, derogatory or ironic • “Yes, sir, if that was the language of love, I'll eat my hat,” said the blood relation, alluding, I took it, to the beastly straw contraption in which she does her gardening, concerning which I can only say that it is almost as foul as Uncle Tom's Sherlock Holmes deerstalker, which has frightened more crows than any other lid in Worcestershire. wiktionary.org)

Add | Report an error | Get short URL