Help, please
David Payne
dpayne1912 at hotmail.com
Tue Nov 11 09:56:28 CST 2008
The word "cam" is much older than the car, and I am impressed, Michael, with the way that you have seemingly magically dug (dialed?) your way back to some of the older meanings of the word.
Forgive this long posting, but here are the definitions I found on OED online.
But wait -- before the long posting from OED -- could "furrow" also refer to a furrowed brow, so that closed eyes are set safely behind a furrowed brow, i.e., switching the view point to the mind's eye?
>From the OED, cam:
cam, n. 1:
[cf. Du. kam (MDu. cam), Ger. kamm, Da. and Sw. kam, the same word as Eng. COMB, but also applied to a ‘toothed rim or part of a wheel, teeth of a wheel’, as in Du. kamrad, Ger. kammrad, Da. and Sw. kamhjul ‘toothed wheel, cog-wheel’; thence also mod.F. came ‘cog, tooth, catch of a wheel, sort of tooth applied to the axle of a machine, or cut in the axle, to serve to raise a pestle or forge-hammer’. Taken into English prob. either from Du. or Fr.
The primary meaning of Teut. kambo- was ‘toothed instrument’; cf. its cognates Gr. - tooth, peg, Skr. jambha- tusk, OSlav. z b tooth: see COMB.]
a. A projecting part of a wheel or other revolving piece of machinery, adapted to impart an alternating or variable motion of any kind to another piece pressing against it, by sliding or rolling contact. Much used in machines in which a uniform revolving motion is employed to actuate any kind of non-uniform, alternating, elliptical, or rectilineal movement. The original method was by cogs or teeth fixed or cut at certain points in the circumference or disc of a wheel, but the name has been extended to any kind of eccentric, heart-shaped, or spiral disc, or other appliance that serves a similar purpose.
1777 Specif. W. Vicker's Patent No. 1168 The wheel F turning a cylinder with a cam and two crankes. 1805 Specif. J. Hartop's Patent No. 2888 Upon any axis A..apply a pin, cam, crank or curve or curves C. 1831 G. PORTER Silk Manuf. 269 Camms, or wheels of eccentric form. 1832 BABBAGE Econ. Manuf. vi. (ed. 3) 44 If one or more projecting pieces, called cams, are fixed on the axis opposite to the end of each lever. 1858 GREENER Gunnery 418. 1867 Athenæum No. 2084. 440/3 An iron camb for power-looms. 1879 Cassell's Techn. Educ. I. 407/2 Cams are variously-formed plates, or grooves, by means of which a circular may be converted into a reciprocating motion.
b. Comb., as cam-ball valve, cam-groove, cam-gear wheel, cam-shaft, cam-wheel. cam-box, a frame surrounding a cam and designed to compel the rod which the cam drives to follow the return motion of the projecting lobe; also, a casing enclosing the cam and its rollers in order that copious lubrication may be secured by having the cams revolve in a bath of oil (Cent. Dict. Suppl. 1909); cam-cutter, a machine-tool specially adapted for cutting and finishing cams; cam-pump, a pump in which the valve motion is given by a cam; cam-shaft, a shaft bearing a cam or cams; also attrib.; cam-yoke, a frame attached to a valve-stem or other reciprocating piece to which it gives intermittent straight-line motion from a cam on the face of a rotating disc; used in steam-engine valve-gears (Funk's Standard Dict. 1893).
a1884 KNIGHT Dict. Mech. Suppl. 156 Cam Cutter. 1922 JACOBS Cam Design 74 The hand-made master cam is now placed in position on the cam cutter head spindle.
1879 Cassell's Techn. Educ. IV. 393/1 A cam-groove cut in the reverse side of the crank-plate.
a1884 KNIGHT Dict. Mech. Suppl. 157 Drayton Cam Pump.
a1877 Dict. Mech. I. 435/2 Cam-shaft, a shaft having cams or wipers, for raising the pestles of stamping-mills. 1908 Westm. Gaz. 9 Jan. 4/1 Depressing the cam-shaft pedal. 1955 Times 20 Aug. 4/3 The new B.R.M. has a 2 -litre short stroke 4-cylinder engine with overhead cam-shafts.
1874 KNIGHT Dict. Mech. 435/2 The duty of the cam-wheel is to give an intermittent reciprocating motion to the bar.
__
cam, n. 2
north. dial.
[= Sc. kame, kaim, a. ON. kamb-r (Da. and Sw. kam) COMB, crest, serrated ridge, crest or ridge of a hill, etc. The same word originally as COMB, and CAM n.1, but the three come through distinct channels, and there is no consciousness of their identity.]
A ridge; a long narrow earthen mound; the bank on which a hedge is planted or the like.
1788 MARSHALL E. Yorksh. Gloss. (E.D.S.), Cam, any long mound of made earth. 1855 Whitby Gloss., Cam, a mound of earth, a bank boundary to a field. 1861 RAMSAY Remin. Ser. II. Introd. 26 (Yorksh. dial.) Cum doun t' cam' soid. 1876 Mid. Yorksh. Gloss., Cam, a rise of hedge-ground; generally cam-side.
__
cam, n. 3
dial.
[f. CAM a. or v.]
Contradiction, crossing in purpose.
1875 Lanc. Gloss. (E.D.S.), When he meets wi cam, there's no good to be done.
__
CAM, n. 4
[f. the initials of Catapult Aircraft Merchant-ship.]
A merchant-ship equipped with a fighter plane launched by catapult.
1943 Cosmopolitan Aug. 14/1 Every eye was turned instinctively to the C.A.M., the convoy's Catapult Aircraft Merchantship, the defiant reply of the Royal Air Force to Nazi air assault on British merchant shipping. 1944 A. M. TAYLOR Lang. World War II 18 CAM: Catapult Aircraft Merchantship. Adopted by the RAF, to accompany and afford protection to convoys. 1945 L. R. GRIBBLE Battle Stories RAF vii. 18 Volunteered to fly with convoys as a catafighter on a Cam-ship. 1954 P. K. KEMP Fleet Air Arm 152 These catapult ships were known as Camships. 1956 ‘TAFFRAIL’ Arctic Convoy xix. 201 A ‘C.A.M.’ ship..an ordinary cargo-carrier fitted with a catapult forward with a single Hurricane fighter.
__
cam, a. and adv.
Obs. exc. dial.
[Adopted from Celtic: in Welsh cam crooked, bent, bowed, awry, wrong, false; Gael. cam crooked, bent, blind of one eye; Manx cam (as in Gaelic); Ir. cam: OIr. camm crooked, repr. an OCeltic *cambo-s, as in the proper name Cambodunum ‘crooked town’. In English probably from Welsh, and no doubt in oral use long before the 16th c. when first found in literature; the derived form cammed is in the Promptorium.]
A. adj. Crooked, twisted, bent from the straight. Hence mod. dial. Perverse, obstinate, ‘cross’.
a1600 HOOKER Serm. iii. Wks. II. 698 His mind is perverse, kam [ed. 1676 cam], and crooked. 1642 Sc. Pasquils (1868) 117 Cam is thy name, Cam are thyne eyies and wayes..Cam are thy lookes, thyne eyies thy ways bewrayes. 1853 AKERMAN Wiltsh. Tales 138 As cam and as obstinate as a mule. 1862 HUGHES in Macm. Mag. V. 236/2 As cam as a peg.
B. adv. Away from the straight line, awry, askew (also fig.). clean cam (kam), ‘crooked, athwart, awry, cross from the purpose’ (J.); cf. KIM KAM.
1579 TOMSON Calvin's Serm. Tim. 909/1 We speake in good earnest, and meane not..to say, walk on, behaue your selues manfully: and go cleane kam our selues like Creuises. 1607 SHAKES. Cor. III. i. 304, Sicin. This is cleane kamme. Brut. Meerely awry. 1611 COTGR. s.v. Contrefoil, The wrong way, cleane contrarie, quite kamme. 1708 MOTTEUX Rabelais V. xxvii, Here they go quite kam, and act clean contrary to others. 1755 JOHNSON, Kam, crooked.
__
cam, v.
dial.
[f. CAM a.]
trans. and intr. (See quots.)
c1746 J. COLLIER (Tim Bobbin) Tummus & M. Wks. (1862) 53 So ot teh [so that they] camm'd little or none; boh agreed t' pey aw meeon [to pay all between them]. 1847-78 HALLIWELL s.v., A person who treads down the shoe heel is said to cam. North. 1875 Lanc. Gloss. (E.D.S.) Colloq. use. He cams his shoon at th' heel. Ibid., Cam, to cross or contradict; to oppose vexatiously; to quarrel. I'll cam him, an' get up his temper.
> On Tue, 11 Nov 2008 (09:57:46 -0500), michael.lee.bailey at gmail.com wrote:
> a word on "cammed": I was working on a car with a buddy back in the
> day and the instructions for replacing the points talked about a cam [...]
> The oval raised places on the camshaft are actually the cams (it's a
> shaft full of cams) and as they rotate, they push the pushrods up.
>
> As the shaft rotates further the (concentric) ovoid's irregular shape
> first pushes the bottom of the pushrod and then doesn't - so the
> pushrod is allowed to retract (pushed down by the springs atop the
> rod) -- so the concept of "cam" is a raised surface on a rotating rod.
>
> So in the distributor that we were working on, there was a similar
> raised place on a shaft with a similar purpose: to convert rotary into
> reciprocating motion and to slave this motion to the rate of rotation.
>
> Now if the old dude is rising every night, in rhythm to the rotary
> motion of the earth, there is some cam-type thing or concept that
> pushes him up out of the furrow.
_________________________________________________________________
Windows Live Hotmail now works up to 70% faster.
http://windowslive.com/Explore/Hotmail?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_hotmail_acq_faster_112008
More information about the Pynchon-l
mailing list