wired

[wahyuh rd] /waɪərd/
adjective
1.
equipped with wires, as for electricity or telephone service.
2.
made of wire; consisting of or constructed with wires:
a wired barrier.
3.
tied or secured with wires:
wired bales of wastepaper.
4.
strengthened or supported with wires:
a sculpture of wired papier-mâché.
5.
Slang. tense with excitement or anticipation; edgy.
6.
equipped so as to receive cable television.
7.
connected electronically to one or more computer networks.
Origin
1375-1425; late Middle English; see wire, -ed3
Related forms
well-wired, adjective

wire

[wahyuh r] /waɪər/
noun
1.
a slender, stringlike piece or filament of relatively rigid or flexible metal, usually circular in section, manufactured in a great variety of diameters and metals depending on its application.
2.
such pieces as a material.
3.
a length of such material, consisting either of a single filament or of several filaments woven or twisted together and usually insulated with a dielectric material, used as a conductor of electricity.
4.
a cross wire or a cross hair.
5.
a barbed-wire fence.
6.
a long wire or cable used in cable, telegraph, or telephone systems.
7.
Nautical. a wire rope.
8.
Informal.
  1. a telegram.
  2. the telegraphic system:
    to send a message by wire.
9.
wires, a system of wires by which puppets are moved.
10.
a metallic string of a musical instrument.
11.
Underworld Slang. the member of a pickpocket team who picks the victim's pocket.
Compare stall2 (def 5).
12.
Horse Racing. a wire stretched across and above the track at the finish line, under which the horses pass.
13.
Ornithology. one of the extremely long, slender, wirelike filaments or shafts of the plumage of various birds.
14.
a metal device for snaring rabbits and other small game.
15.
Papermaking. the woven wire mesh over which the wet pulp is spread in a papermaking machine.
16.
the wire, the telephone:
There's someone on the wire for you.
adjective
17.
made of wire; consisting of or constructed with wires.
18.
resembling wire; wirelike.
verb (used with object), wired, wiring.
19.
to furnish with wires.
20.
to install an electric system of wiring in, as for lighting.
21.
to fasten or bind with wire:
He wired the halves together.
22.
to put on a wire, as beads.
23.
to send by telegraph, as a message:
Please wire the money at once.
24.
to send a telegraphic message to:
She wired him to come at once.
25.
to snare by means of a wire.
26.
to equip with a hidden electronic device, as an eavesdropping device or an explosive.
27.
to connect (a receiver, area, or building) to a television cable and other equipment so that cable television programs may be received.
28.
Informal. to be closely connected or involved with:
a law firm wired into political circles.
29.
Informal. to prepare, equip, fix, or arrange to suit needs or goals:
The sales force was wired for an all-out effort.
30.
Croquet. to block (a ball) by placing it behind the wire of an arch.
verb (used without object), wired, wiring.
31.
to send a telegraphic message; telegraph:
Don't write; wire.
Idioms
32.
down to the wire, to the very last moment or the very end, as in a race or competition:
The candidates campaigned down to the wire.
33.
pull wires, Informal. to use one's position or influence to obtain a desired result:
to pull wires to get someone a job.
34.
under the wire, just within the limit or deadline; scarcely; barely:
to get an application in under the wire.
Origin
before 900; Middle English wir(e) (noun), Old English wīr; cognate with Low German wīr, Old Norse vīra- wire, Old High German wiara fine goldwork
Related forms
wirable, adjective
wirelike, adjective
dewire, verb (used with object), dewired, dewiring.
miswire, verb, miswired, miswiring.
prewire, verb (used with object), prewired, prewiring.
unwirable, adjective
Can be confused
why're, wire.
Examples from the web for wired
  • We appear to be wired to find all manner of fads psychologically irresistible.
  • Once printed, the reels can be cut up into individual cells and wired together to make battery packs.
  • And they are less pricey than wired networks, especially for faster connections.
  • The brains of psychopaths are wired differently from yours and mine.
  • It seems as though these are wired up in a way that causes the animal to take pleasure from monogamy.
  • Wireless sensors can be added to a structure much more easily, quickly and cheaply than wired sensors.
  • Animals are wired up internally by blood vessels, nerves, intestines and so.
  • If a lesion knocks out one ability but leaves another intact, it is evidence that they are wired into different neural circuits.
  • Because the cells in a panel and the panels in a string are wired in series, the amperage of one determines the amperage of all.
  • Their brains are wired differently which makes them in some areas excel above their peers.
British Dictionary definitions for wired

wired

/waɪəd/
adjective (informal)
1.
edgy from stimulant intake
2.
excited, nervous, or tense
3.
using computers to send and receive information, esp via the internet

wire

/waɪə/
noun
1.
a slender flexible strand or rod of metal
2.
a cable consisting of several metal strands twisted together
3.
a flexible metallic conductor, esp one made of copper, usually insulated, and used to carry electric current in a circuit
4.
(modifier) of, relating to, or made of wire: a wire fence, a wire stripper
5.
anything made of wire, such as wire netting, a barbed wire fence, etc
6.
a long continuous wire or cable connecting points in a telephone or telegraph system
7.
(old-fashioned)
  1. an informal name for telegram, telegraph
  2. the wire, an informal name for telephone
8.
a metallic string on a guitar, piano, etc
9.
(horse racing, mainly US & Canadian) the finishing line on a racecourse
10.
a wire-gauze screen upon which pulp is spread to form paper during the manufacturing process
11.
anything resembling a wire, such as a hair
12.
a snare made of wire for rabbits and similar animals
13.
(informal) to the wire, down to the wire, right up to the last moment
14.
(informal, mainly US & Canadian) get in under the wire, to accomplish something with little time to spare
15.
(informal) get one's wires crossed, to misunderstand
16.
(mainly US & Canadian) pull wires, to exert influence behind the scenes, esp through personal connections; pull strings
17.
take it to the wire, to compete to the bitter end to win a competition or title
verb (mainly transitive)
18.
(also intransitive) to send a telegram to (a person or place)
19.
to send (news, a message, etc) by telegraph
20.
to equip (an electrical system, circuit, or component) with wires
21.
to fasten or furnish with wire
22.
(often foll by up) to provide (an area) with fibre optic cabling to receive cable television
23.
to string (beads, etc) on wire
24.
(croquet) to leave (a player's ball) so that a hoop or peg lies between it and the other balls
25.
to snare with wire
26.
(informal) wire in, to set about (something, esp food) with enthusiasm
Derived Forms
wirelike, adjective
Word Origin
Old English wīr; related to Old High German wiara, Old Norse vīra, Latin viriae bracelet
Word Origin and History for wired
adj.

"nervous, jittery," by 1970s; earlier (1959, perhaps early 1950s) as "using narcotic drugs, addicted to drugs;" from past participle of wire (v.).

wire

n.

Old English wir "metal drawn out into a thread," from Proto-Germanic *wiraz (cf. Old Norse viravirka "filigree work," Swedish vira "to twist," Old High German wiara "fine gold work"), from PIE *wei- "to turn, twist, plait" (cf. Old Irish fiar, Welsh gwyr "bent, crooked;" Latin viere "to bend, twist," viriæ "bracelets," of Celtic origin). Wiretapping is recorded from 1904, from earlier wiretapper (1893). Wirepuller in the political sense is 1848, American English.

v.

"to furnish with wires," mid-15c., from wire (n.). Related: Wired; wiring.

Slang definitions & phrases for wired

wired

adjective
  1. (also wired up) Intoxicated by narcotics, esp cocaine or amphetamines; high, spaced-out: ''If you're wired, you're fired,'' is how Willie Nelson warns band members about cocaine usage/ That night Elvis was wired for speed (1970s+ Narcotics)
  2. (also wired up) Eagerly excited; overstimulated; high, hyper, jacked up: Keeping the people wired with a mix of Sixties vines and Eighties technology/ They have him wired up tight with the slogans of TV and the World Series (1970s+)
  3. Anxious; nervous; uptight: I got wired when Myrt was sneaking a break and Jerry showed up (1970s+)
  4. (also wired up) Certain and secure; totally under control; assured; racked, taped: Mention of all those other top contenders is just a smokescreen and Brown's got it wired/ Then I get this wired up and I think, well (1950s+ fr poker)
  5. Wearing an eavesdropping device; having such a device planted; bugged: He's wired. He's wearing a tape recorder (1957+)
Related Terms

cool as a christian with aces wired, have something cinched

[fr wire as conducting an electrical charge or stimulus, or as used for binding; wired up is recorded as a US term for ''irritated, provoked'' in the late 1800s and may be related to the sense ''anxious, nervous'']


wire

noun
  1. : Send me a wire if you get the job
  2. : They checked to see whether she was wearing a wire
  3. An overstimulated person; an anxious, excitable person: You know I'm a natural wire. What I need is a drink to calm me down
verb
  1. To send a telegram: Wire me when you get there (1859+)
  2. To place eavesdropping devices in a room, office, etc, or concealed on someone's body; bug: She quietly checked to see if her bedroom was wired/ The FBI wired me before they sent me to see the suspect (1950s+)
Related Terms

come up to the wire, down to the wire, go to the wire, haywire, hot-wire


wired in Technology
Idioms and Phrases with wired
Encyclopedia Article for wired

wire

thread or slender rod, usually very flexible and circular in cross section, made from various metals and alloys, including iron, steel, brass, bronze, copper, aluminum, zinc, gold, silver, and platinum. The processes used are all fundamentally the same

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