velocipede

[vuh-los-uh-peed] /vəˈlɒs əˌpid/
noun
1.
a vehicle, usually having two or three wheels, that is propelled by the rider.
2.
an early kind of bicycle or tricycle.
3.
a light, three-wheeled, pedal-driven vehicle for railway inspection, used for carrying one person on a railroad track.
Origin
1810-20; < French vélocipède bicycle, equivalent to véloci- (< Latin, stem of vēlōx quick) + -pède -ped
Related forms
velocipedist, noun
Examples from the web for velocipede
  • Level setup with inclined tripod on motor velocipede.
British Dictionary definitions for velocipede

velocipede

/vɪˈlɒsɪˌpiːd/
noun
1.
an early form of bicycle propelled by pushing along the ground with the feet
2.
any early form of bicycle or tricycle
Derived Forms
velocipedist, noun
Word Origin
C19: from French vélocipède, from Latin vēlōx swift + pēs foot
Word Origin and History for velocipede
n.

1819, "wheeled vehicle propelled by the feet on the ground," from French vélocipède, from Latin velox (genitive velocis) "swift" (see velocity) + pedem, accusative of pes "foot" (see foot (n.)). Applied to an early kind of bicycle or tricycle in 1849.

Encyclopedia Article for velocipede

boneshaker

version of the bicycle reinvented in the 1860s by the Michaux family of Paris. Its iron and wood construction and lack of springs earned it the nickname boneshaker. It was driven by pedaling cranks on the front axle. To increase the distance covered for each turn of the cranks, the front wheel was enlarged until, finally, in the ordinary, or penny-farthing, bicycle, the wheel would just go under the crotch of the rider. The penny-farthing nickname came from the smallest and largest British coins of the time, in reference to the disparity in the size of the wheels. By the second half of the 20th century, the original meaning was restricted to those knowledgeable in the history of the bicycle, while to others it referred to a children's tricycle, which duplicates the differentiated wheel size. The velocipede was eventually replaced by the more stable safety bicycle, having a chain-driven rear wheel

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