a string of daisies linked together to form a chain.
2.
such a chain used as a garland or carried on festive days by a group of women college students.
3.
a series of interconnected or related things or events:
a daisy chain of legislative delays and stalemates.
4.
Slang. a group sexual activity in which the participants serve as active and passive partners to different people simultaneously.
5.
Commerce. a series of transactions designed to create the appearance of active trading, as in a particular stock, in order to manipulate the price.
Origin
1835-45
British Dictionary definitions for daisy chain
daisy chain
noun
1.
a garland made, esp by children, by threading daisies together
Slang definitions & phrases for daisy chain
daisy chain
noun phrase
Sexual acts shared or partly shared by more than two people at the same time in the same place; group sex (1941+)
verb phrase
To connect; link; chain: Up to 8 EXP-16's may be daisy-chained together for a total of 128 differential inputs(1990s+)
daisy chain in Technology
networking A bus wiring scheme in which, for example, device A is wired to device B, device B is wired to device C, etc. The last device is normally wired to a resistor or terminator. All devices may receive identical signals or, in contrast to a simple bus, each device in the chain may modify one or more signals before passing them on. Characteristic of RS-485, of Apple's LocalTalk, and of various industrial control networks; also often used to describe Thinwire Ethernet (10base2). (1997-01-07)
Idioms and Phrases with daisy chain
daisy chain
.
A series of connected events, activities, or experiences. For example, The daisy chain of lectures on art history encompassed the last 200 years. This metaphorical term alludes to a string of the flowers linked together. [ Mid-1800s ]
.
A line or circle of three or more persons engaged in simultaneous sexual activity. For example, A high-class call girl, she drew the line at daisy chains. [ ; 1920s ]
.
A series of securities transactions intended to give the impression of active trading so as to drive up the price. For example, The SEC is on the alert for unscrupulous brokers who are engaging in daisy chains. [ 1980s ]