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Definition of Machine-driven
1. Adjective. Operated by automation. "An automated stoker"
Lexicographical Neighbors of Machine-driven
Literary usage of Machine-driven
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Experimental Electrical Engineering and Manual for Electrical Testing for by Vladimir Karapetoff (1922)
"EXPERIMENT 13-B. — Efficiency from Losses, Machine Driven Mechanically. — The
experiment is performed as explained in §319. The diagram of connections is ..."
2. Mathematical Questions and Solutions by W. J. C. Miller (1880)
"(By Dr. HOPKINSON, FRS)—Two magneto-electric machines, •with permanent inducing
magnets, are used for the transmission of power, the first machine driven by ..."
3. A Dictionary of Electrical Words, Terms and Phrases by Edwin James Houston (1903)
"... machine, driven or propelled by the voice of the speaker, in which the currents
so produced instead of being commuted are employed ..."
4. Towers and Tanks for Water-works: The Theory and Practice of Their Design by James Nisbit Hazlehurst (1901)
"Field-riveting and machine-driven Rivets.—As the field- work consists largely of
riveting the members together, the following, taken from the Locomotive, ..."
5. The New International Encyclopædia edited by Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby (1904)
"The trimming is effected by specially adjusted, rapidly revolving wheels.
The final polishing is done by machine- driven burnishers, ..."
6. A Manual of the Mechanics of Engineering and of the Construction of Machines by Julius Ludwig Weisbach (1890)
"2) The prime mover has an interrupted rectilinear motion and the machine driven
by it a continuous, usually circular, motion (steam engine turning a ..."
7. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1919)
"In the first mill erected in Germany in 1390, such a machine driven by water
power was used to prepare rags. Water power was also used in a paper mill in ..."
8. International Library of Technology: A Series of Textbooks for Persons by International Textbook Company (1902)
"The economy of the machine at these low temperatures was better than that of a
compression machine driven by a compound Corliss engine that would not use ..."