Dictionary Definition
sled n : a vehicle mounted on runners and pulled
by horses or dogs; for transportation over snow [syn: sledge, sleigh] v : ride (on) a sled
[syn: sleigh] [also:
sledding]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɛd
Noun
- A vehicle on runners, used for conveying loads over the snow or ice; -- in England called sledge.
- A small, light vehicle with runners, used, mostly by young persons, for sliding on snow or ice.
Translations
a vehicle on runners, used for conveying loads
over the snow or ice
a small, light vehicle with runners, used,
mostly by young persons, for sliding on snow or ice
Extensive Definition
A sled, sledge or sleigh is a vehicle with runners for sliding instead of wheels for rolling. It is used for transport on surfaces with low
friction, usually
snow or ice but any grassy surface is good
when it is not too dry. In some cases round river-washed stones
make a good surface for sledges. Devices to be pulled across bare
ground, such as a travois, are not generally
called "sleds", although skids often are.
Sleds are typically smaller and simpler than
sleighs which are generally understood to be a larger vehicle
designed for riding in a sitting position that is drawn by a draft
animal such as a horse or oxen, though this is not always the case.
The sitting connotation is clear as the English Bobsleigh is a
steerable sled invented to sit upon or within. North Americans
transmorphed this into Bobsled, since
clearly the vehicle is not drawn by a draft animal. Both (or all
four) are lightweight vehicles whereas a sledge is more usually a
low, sturdy, and rough work vehicle designed for haulage of heavy
loads such as cordwood, stone or ice blocks or the manifold heavy
transport needs on a farm.
With only gravity as the propelling
force, a sled can be used
downhill as a recreational (toy) vehicle or drawn behind one
trudging step by trudging step to haul a load—such as
logs or children back up a slope. Modern competitive sledding has
come about since the 1870s when steerable
sleds were invented as a recreational prescription
to combat winter boredom
amongst the rich and privileged in the alpine resort town of
St
Moritz by British hotel guests.
Alternatively, sleds may be pulled by animals, usually horses, mules, oxen or dogs. They may also be pushed or
pulled by humans (playing children, a parent pulling a child,
etc.). Man-hauled sledges were the traditional means of transport
on British exploring expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctic regions
in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Dog-teams were used by most
others, such as Roald
Amundsen. Today some people use kites to tow
exploration sleds in such climes. The Egyptians are thought to have
used sledges extensively over the sands whilst building their
public works, in particular, for the transportation of taller
obelisks.
A troika is a vehicle drawn by three horses,
usually a sled, but it may also be a wheeled carriage.
The SR-71
Blackbird is also referred to by the nickname "sled" and its
pilots are referred to as "sled drivers".
The various categories of sleds include:
See also
External links
sled in Chuvash: Çуна
sled in Czech: Saně
sled in Danish: Slæde
sled in Pennsylvania German: Schlidde
sled in Spanish: Trineo
sled in Esperanto: Sledo
sled in Persian: سورتمه
sled in French: Traîneau
sled in Galician: Zorra
sled in Italian: Slitta
sled in Hebrew: מזחלת
sled in Dutch: Slee
sled in Japanese: ソリ
sled in Polish: Sanie
sled in Portuguese: Trenó
sled in Romanian: Sanie
sled in Russian: Сани
sled in Finnish: Reki
sled in Swedish: Släpsläde
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Skimobile, Sno-Cat, barge, blade, boat, bobsleigh, bus, cart, coach, coast, coaster, cutter, dogsled, double-ripper, drag, dray, ferry, flit, float, flow, fly, glide, glissade, haul, ice-skate, jumper, lighter, luge, pung, raft, roller-skate, runner, sail, scoot, ship, sideslip, skate, skateboard, ski, skid, skim, sledge, sleigh, slide, slip, slither, snowmobile, sweep, toboggan, troika, truck, van, wagon, weasel, wheelbarrow