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Fusee   Listen
noun
Fusee  n.  
1.
A flintlock gun. See 2d Fusil. (Obs.)
2.
A fuse. See Fuse, n.
3.
(a)
A friction match for smokers' use having a bulbous head which when ignited is not easily blown out even in a gale of wind.
(b)
A kind of match made of paper impregnated with niter and having the usual igniting tip.
4.
A signal device, usually cylindrical, consisting of a tube filled with a composition which burns with a bright colored light for a definite time. It is used principally for the protection of trains or road vehicles, indicating an obstruction or accident ahead. Also called a flare or railroad flare.



Fusee  n.  The track of a buck.



Fusee  n.  
1.
The cone or conical wheel of a watch or clock, designed to equalize the power of the mainspring by having the chain from the barrel which contains the spring wind in a spiral groove on the surface of the cone in such a manner that the diameter of the cone at the point where the chain acts may correspond with the degree of tension of the spring.
2.
A similar wheel used in other machinery.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Fusee" Quotes from Famous Books



... Claude Henri Fusee de Voisenon, Abbe of Jard, and Minister Plenipotentiary of the Prince-Bishop of Spire, was born at Voisenon on the 8th of June, 1708. Biographers have, perhaps, laid too much stress on the debility of constitution which he brought with him into the world, inherited, they say, ...
— The International Monthly, Volume 2, No. 4, March, 1851 • Various

... House of Lords, after the manner of Guy Fawkes, laying trains of gunpowder and singing the well-known lines about the fifth of November. The 'Daily Pulpit,' on the other hand, declared that Lord Randolph Church-hill had set the Thames on fire with native genius and a lighted fusee, which, on the face of it, seemed so extremely probable, that all of the British public that was not cheering the Army's arrival rushed to the bridges to investigate the river. Delegates from the 'Holywell Street Gazette,' ...
— 'That Very Mab' • May Kendall and Andrew Lang

... ancient bills formerly used in England by the yeomanry. They were represented to me by the Turks as dangerous in personal combat. They had never seen fire-arms before, and they nevertheless withstood them with great intrepidity. They said, I was informed, that a fusee was "a coward's weapon, who stands at a safe distance from his enemy, and kills him ...
— A Narrative of the Expedition to Dongola and Sennaar • George Bethune English

... fine sand, then swelling into a huge cone, and raining in a continuous shower on the Champs-Elysees district, which it inundated with a splashing, dancing radiance. For a long time did this shower of sparks descend, spraying continuously like a fusee. ...
— A Love Episode • Emile Zola

... I looked them over man by man. Each savage carried a bag with ten pounds of maize flour, a light covering, a bow and arrows, or a fusee. The Winnebagoes I had put well in the lead, for they were protected by great shields of dried buffalo skin. I tried one of the skin shields and found it like iron. It would ...
— Montlivet • Alice Prescott Smith


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