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Sluice   /slus/   Listen
noun
Sluice  n.  
1.
An artifical passage for water, fitted with a valve or gate, as in a mill stream, for stopping or regulating the flow; also, a water gate or flood gate.
2.
Hence, an opening or channel through which anything flows; a source of supply. "Each sluice of affluent fortune opened soon." "This home familiarity... opens the sluices of sensibility."
3.
The stream flowing through a flood gate.
4.
(Mining) A long box or trough through which water flows, used for washing auriferous earth.
Sluice gate, the sliding gate of a sluice.



verb
Sluice  v. t.  (past & past part. sluiced; pres. part. sluicing)  
1.
To emit by, or as by, flood gates. (R.)
2.
To wet copiously, as by opening a sluice; as, to sluice meadows. "He dried his neck and face, which he had been sluicing with cold water."
3.
To wash with, or in, a stream of water running through a sluice; as, to sluice eart or gold dust in mining.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Sluice" Quotes from Famous Books



... on the ro[u]ka. Pending its disposition Rokuzo devoted himself to his ablutions with decent slowness, to allow the idea of remuneration to filter into the somewhat fat wits of these ladies. At first he was inclined thoroughly to sluice himself inwardly. The water was deliciously cool to the outer person on this hot day. But on approaching the bucket to his mouth there was an indefinable nauseating something about it that made him ...
— Bakemono Yashiki (The Haunted House) - Tales of the Tokugawa, Volume 2 (of 2) • James S. De Benneville

... of Skulltree dam was open and in the caldron of the gorge a yeasty flood boiled and the sunlight painted rainbows in the drifting spume. Rolling cumbrously, end over end, at the foot of the sluice, lifting glistening, dripping flanks, sinking and darting through the white smother of the waters, the logs of the Flagg drive had begun their flight to ...
— Joan of Arc of the North Woods • Holman Day

... Then strength is a duty; then weakness is a sin. Then the amount of strength that we possess and wield is regulated by ourselves. We have our hands on the sluice. We may open it to let the whole full tide run in, or we may close it till a mere dribble reaches us. For the strength which is strength, and not merely weakness in a fever, is a strength derived, and ours because derived. The Apostle gives the ...
— Expositions Of Holy Scripture - Volume I: St. Luke, Chaps. I to XII • Alexander Maclaren

... as he could—in other words, very badly. He neglected to search for alluvial gold in the sands. Every Wady which cuts, at right angles, the metalliferous maritime chains, should have been carefully prospected; these sandy and quartzose beds are natural conduits and sluice-boxes. But the search for "tailings" is completely different from that of gold-veins, and requires especial practice. The process, indeed, may be called purely empirical. It is not taught in Jermyn Street, nor by the Ecole des ...
— The Land of Midian, Vol. 1 • Richard Burton

... as it had seemed, miraculous cessation of the waterfall. Just above the confluence of the two streams, which were of moderate width, and not deep, but which received, even in the summer months, an abundant supply of water from the mountain-springs, were a couple of rough-fashioned sluice-gates, consisting of strong boards, sliding down between grooved posts, and which the strength of two men sufficed to remove or return to their places. Above these gates, trenches, now overgrown with grass and bushes, had been cut; so that when the ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 59, No. 367, May 1846 • Various


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