waywiser
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Compare German Wegweiser (“a waymark, a guide”), from Weg (“way”) + weisen (“to show, direct”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]waywiser (plural waywisers)
- An instrument for measuring distance travelled, such as an odometer, pedometer, perambulator, etc.
- 1656, John Evelyn, Diary:
- I went to see Colonel Blount, who showed me the application of the "Waywiser" to a coach, exactly measuring the miles and showing them by an index as we went along.
- 1902, Alice Morse Earle, Sun Dials and Roses of Yesterday:
- The Emperor Rudolphus II had a curious waywiser or odometer which is attributed to Schissler.
- 2009, Wolfram Dolz, “The Waywisers of Elector Augustus of Saxony and Their New Use in the Survey of Saxon Postal Roads”, in European Collections of Scientific Instruments, 1550-1750, page 44:
- Therefore, Elector Augustus did all he could to promote the development of mechanical waywisers that would be able to do this work automatically.
- An instrument for determining direction (and possibly other aspects of one's travel as well).
- 1832, Thomas Forster, Annals of Some Remarkable Aërial and Alpine Voyages:
- Not being accustomed to this cruciform movement, I was not able, by the waywiser, to determine the real direction of the balloon, and on this account M. Robertson suffered to escape a considerable quantity of gas; on which we again fell till the barometer stood at 29 inches, about 50 minutes past seven.
- 1859, Frederick Robert Augustus Glover, The Polymeter, Or Quintant:
- THE Waywiser is an instrument whereby a man may steer himself where there is no path, or underground, in a mine; or find his way if he have lost it.
- 2002, Stephen Inwood, The Man Who Knew Too Much:
- The purpose of the waywiser was to enable a navigator to keep a track of a ship's location by measuring and recording the speed and direction of its journey.
- (figurative) A guide; A means of determining the direction in which to proceed.
- 1931, Justice of the Peace and Local Government Review, page 461:
- We have not sought to make a treatise, but only to set up a waywiser or signpost to show the road the law is taking .
- 1974, Joseph Needham, Science and Civilisation in China, page xxxiii:
- In previous volumes we have often given a few words of help to the prospective reader, intended as a sort of waywiser to guide him through those pages not always possible to lighten by some memorable illustration .
- 2021, Shane Chalmers, Sundhya Pahuja, Routledge Handbook of International Law and the Humanities:
- This is the research question. This is the waywiser.