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Definition of Trembler
1. Noun. One who quakes and trembles with (or as with) fear.
Definition of Trembler
1. n. One who trembles.
2. n. Any of certain West Indian birds of the genera Cinclocerthia and Rhamphocinclus, of the family Mimidæ.
Definition of Trembler
1. Noun. One who, or that which, trembles. ¹
2. Noun. Any of various New World passerine birds of the family ''Mimidae''. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Trembler
1. one that trembles [n -S] - See also: trembles
Lexicographical Neighbors of Trembler
Literary usage of Trembler
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Electric Ignition for Combustion Motors by Forrest Robert Jones (1912)
"The trembler spring has a small piece of soft steel fastened to its free end ...
This soft steel armature is to cause the end of the trembler to be more ..."
2. Dyke's Automobile and Gasoline Engine Encyclopedia by Andrew Lee Dyke (1916)
"The current cannot travel beyond the trembler blade because, as will be seen,
the platinum points are separated. Neither can it complete circuit along the ..."
3. Dyke's Automobile and Gasoline Engine Encyclopedia by Andrew Lee Dyke (1919)
"trembler ontinued from page 280, 281 The coil of the Bosch dual system u fitted
into a vulcanite cylindrical box. which is attached to the dashboard, flg. ..."
4. A History of Wireless Telegraphy, 1838-1899: Including Some Bare-wire by John Joseph Fahie (1900)
"This trembler must be so arranged, as hereinafter explained, ... The small hammer
of the trembler hits the tube or imperfect contact and so stops the ..."
5. A Practical Treatise on Natural and Artificial Concrete: Its Varieties and by Henry Reid (1879)
"The slabs made by this machine are more easily handled than those produced by
the " trembler." Its action is, however, much slower, and the paving slabs ..."
6. The American Cyclopedia of the Automobile; Or, Motor Cars and Motoring Self edited by Thomas Herbert Russell, Charles P. Root (1909)
"The brass blade being controlled by the stop on the hammer, it also has to move
downward with the hammer, and contact is thus broken at the trembler points. ..."