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Perforate   /pˈərfərˌeɪt/   Listen
Perforate

verb
(past & past part. perforated; pres. part. perforating)
1.
Make a hole into or between, as for ease of separation.  Synonym: punch.
2.
Pass into or through, often by overcoming resistance.  Synonym: penetrate.
adjective
1.
Having a hole cut through.  Synonyms: perforated, pierced, punctured.  "A perforated eardrum" , "A punctured balloon"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Perforate" Quotes from Famous Books



... devour greedily tigers, dogs, rats, frogs, insects, and other sorts of food, unpopular elsewhere, they are distinguished by their ornaments as well. The under-lip is the part which they perforate, and wherein they wear their usual pins; besides which they fasten a large lump of arnotto to the hair of the front ...
— The Ethnology of the British Colonies and Dependencies • Robert Gordon Latham

... employed such a number of perforating machines as the exigencies of business demanded. Each machine was operated by a clerk, who translated the message into telegraphic characters and prepared the transmitting tape by punching the necessary perforations therein. An expert clerk could perforate such a tape at the rate of fifty to sixty words per minute. At the receiving end the tape was taken by other clerks who translated the Morse characters into ordinary words, which were written on message blanks for delivery to persons for whom ...
— Edison, His Life and Inventions • Frank Lewis Dyer and Thomas Commerford Martin

... except where the snow peaks perforate its carpet covering, the Woodland changes its character, rather than gives place to anything fresh along the shores of the Lake Region of the Old World. Here and there, in detached plateaux enfolded among the ranges (like the Salt Lake basin and ...
— The Unity of Civilization • Various

... of which moves vertically and is armed with 300 needles of tempered steel, sharpened in a right angle. At every blow of the machine they pass through the holes in the lower fixed piece, which correspond with the needles, and perforate five sheets at every blow. Hulot now substitutes this piece by aluminum bronze. Each machine makes daily 120,000 blows, or 180,000,000 perforations, and it has been found that a cushion of the aluminum alloy was unaffected after some months' use, while one of brass ...
— Scientific American Supplement, No. 362, December 9, 1882 • Various

... over his face, so that he saw as little in front as he did in rear. Indeed, if he could, it would have availed him little in the circumstances; for his horse, as if in league with the disaffected, ran full tilt towards the solemn equipage of the Duke, which the projecting lance threatened to perforate from window to window, at the risk of transfixing as many in its passage as the celebrated thrust of Orlando, which, according to the Italian epic poet, broached as many Moors as a ...
— Old Mortality, Complete, Illustrated • Sir Walter Scott


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