setdown
The act of setting down something or someone.
Noun
- The act of setting down something or someone.
- setdown areas in a factory for materials unloaded from incoming vehicles
- The [tour] bus brought them to the next setdown point, the gravesites of John and Robert Kennedy. - 1980, Brian O’Connor, chapter 23, in The One-Shot War,, New York: Times Books, page 149:
- 2003, Nancy Kerrigan and Mary Spencer, Artistry on Ice, Champaign IL: Human Kinetics, Chapter 18, p. 141, […] lifts are an equal relationship, with both [figure skating] partners starting the lift, maintaining its...
- The act of descending onto a surface (of an aircraft or spacecraft).
- The platforms [at the rear of the spaceship] will also have legs for landing—designed to cushion the setdown and also to help level off the ship. - 1957, Lester Del Rey, chapter 11, in Rockets through Space,...
- The medic would have to hold them on hover and watch the radar for a clear setdown. - 1969, Andre Norton, chapter 13, in Postmarked the Stars, New York: Ballantine, published 1985, page 132:
- You had almost no time, yet you autorotate at barely three hundred feet to make a perfect setdown on this flyspot. That was incredible flying. - 1986, James Clavell, Whirlwind, New York: William Morrow, Volume 1, Book...
- The humbling of a person by act or words.
- Diva fell quietly asleep, and presently there were indications that she would soon be noisily asleep. Miss Mapp hoped that she would begin to snore properly, for that would be a good set-down for Lucia […] - 1931, E. F....
- A retort or a reproof that has a humbling effect.
- He walked here, and he walked there, fancying himself so very great! […] I wish you had been there my dear, to have given him one of your set downs. - 1813 January 27, [Jane Austen], chapter 3, in Pride and Prejudice:...
- To see a family taking deck passage on the boat […] is an interesting spot in the day’s experience, especially when some patronising passenger, accustomed to “natives” in other countries, gets one of the delightful...
Synonyms: put-down
- A sit-down meal eaten by a tramp; a charitable meal provided to a tramp in the giver's home.
- In Germany and England the tramps usually eat their set-downs in cheap restaurants or at lodging-houses. - 1899, Josiah Flynt, Tramping with Tramps, New York: Century, published 1901, Part 1, Chapter 6, p. 146, footnote...
- They had just finished eating, and I was taken right into the dining room—in itself a most unusual happening, for the tramp who is lucky enough to win a set-down usually receives it in the kitchen. - 1907, Jack London,...
- A person’s buttocks.
- “If we [boys] did get caught the watchman would take the wooden end of his hood, slap our setdowns, then give us a kick and say, ‘Get out!’ […]” - 1915, Clifton Johnson, chapter 11, in Highways and Byways of New...
Origin
* Deverbal from set down. * (buttocks): See set as US regional form of sit, and see sit down.