Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • transitive verb To encase in or provide with a water jacket.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • To surround or fit with a water-jacket.
  • noun A casing containing water placed about something to keep it cool, or otherwise regulate its temperature. Compare water-mantle and water-box.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Fig. 10.3: Constructional drawing of a water-jacket plant.

    10. Appendix 1989

  • Of all simple systems, the water-jacket plant is the cleanest.

    5. Design of biogas plants 1988

  • Fig. 34: Comparison of floating drums for water-jacket plants (A) and for plants with internal gas outlet (B): Bot types of plant are assumed to have the same gas-holding capacity.

    5. Design of biogas plants 1988

  • The water-jacket is particularly suitable where human excrement is to be digested.

    5. Design of biogas plants 1988

  • The water-jacket plant (Figure 33) is a special case of the floating-drum plant.

    5. Design of biogas plants 1988

  • The very large percentage of heat absorbed by the water-jacket should point out to the ingenuity of inventors the first problem to be attacked, viz., how to save this heat without wasting the lubricant or making it inoperative; and in the solution of this problem, I look for the most important improvement to be expected in the engine.

    Scientific American Supplement, No. 508, September 26, 1885 Various

  • They are all water-cooled, having a water-jacket of sheet metal entirely surrounding the barrel.

    The Emma Gees Herbert Wes McBride

  • A water-jacket for cooling the walls of a gas-producer or glass-furnace is much more like a water-jacket for cooling the walls of a limekiln or steam-boiler furnace than it is like the art of gas-making or manufacture of glass articles.

    The Classification of Patents United States Patent Office

  • In accordance with what are thought to be the correct principles, therefore, the zinc-condenser ought not to be classified as a part of the art of metallurgy, nor the water-jacket as a part of the art of gas-making, merely because these instruments have a use in these arts, but should be included, respectively, in classes based upon the more fundamental utilities effected by them.

    The Classification of Patents United States Patent Office

  • Taking a compass bearing of the position of one of the machine-guns, for the cloud of steam arising from its overheated water-jacket disclosed its place of concealment, Wilmshurst made a careful note of the fact for subsequent use.

    Wilmshurst of the Frontier Force Ernest [Illustrator] Prater 1917

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