engine
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
engine/ˈenʤɪn/
▶noun
- 1 a machine with moving parts that converts power into motion.
- 2 (also railway engine) a locomotive.
- 3 historical a mechanical device or instrument, especially one used in warfare.
– derivatives
-engined adjective,
engineless adjective.
-engined adjective,
engineless adjective.
word history: The word engine entered Middle English in the sense ‘ingenuity, cunning’, coming via Old French engin from Latin ingenium ‘talent, device’ (the root also of ingenious). From the original sense arose ‘the product of ingenuity, a plot or snare’, also ‘tool, weapon’; the latter use came to apply specifically to a large mechanical weapon, from which, in the mid 17th century, arose the idea of a machine.
'engine' also found in these Oxford entries:
accelerator
- afterburner
- airboat
- air filter
- airframe
- appliance
- aspirate
- backfire
- beam
- beam engine
- beer engine
- big end
- block
- boat
- boiler
- bonnet
- brake horsepower
- burn
- camshaft
- capacity
- carburettor
- chain drive
- choke
- chuff
- chug
- clutch
- combustion chamber
- compression
- compression ratio
- connecting rod
- coolant
- cough
- cowling
- crank
- cross head
- cut
- cylinder
- cylinder head
- decoke
- detune
- diesel
- diesel-hydraulic
- dipstick
- displacement
- distributor
- donkey engine
- driveshaft
- duty
- dynamometer
- engage

