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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
climber
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
social climber
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
good
▪ She loved travel, took walking and cycling holidays abroad, and was a good mountain climber.
▪ Solly's climb was to perplex and stretch the best climbers for decades.
▪ The best climbers in the school were picked for the hunt and they set out, one on each shelf.
▪ Henry Druce meets the man behind the image Chris Bonington is Britain's best known climber and adventurer.
▪ But he's a good climber.
▪ Rarely a day passes when, at some time, the rock isn't ripe for climbing. Good news for climbers.
social
▪ He's got to be the biggest social climber of all time.
▪ We are all self-promoters and social climbers.
▪ There may be honour among thieves, but there did not appear to be anything similar among social climbers.
▪ It came to be controlled by a contingent of WASPs, wannabe WASPs, and social climbers.
■ NOUN
mountain
▪ She loved travel, took walking and cycling holidays abroad, and was a good mountain climber.
▪ Lionel Terray said mountain climber Pierre Lachenal broke many climbing records not by setting out to do so.
▪ Take a mountain climber, a Grand Prix racing-driver or a person conquering a devastating handicap.
▪ Wearing a pair of tennis shoes, he walked up the steep hill with the energy of a young mountain climber.
▪ An experienced mountain climber, Gray rested, enjoying lunch and the view.
rock
▪ He's also an accomplished rock climber.
▪ She has been a keen walker and rock climber for many years and has climbed in the Alps, Pyrenees and Dolomites.
▪ On this route you will be able to visit the Wasdale Head Inn, a once favourite haunt of rock climbers.
▪ Many feature spectacular limestone cliffs of the sort that rock climbers find irresistible.
▪ Our finest rock climbers have become obsessed by performance, by standards and numbers.
▪ From there he told Wesley Smith about his life as a railway enthusiast, composer and rock climber.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ an experienced climber
▪ The search is still continuing for a group of climbers reported missing in the Scottish highlands.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ At the base, we're looking at the photos of celebrity climbers.
▪ Graham was a pioneer rock and winter climber before a broken leg turned him to sailing.
▪ Support comes from a team of three experienced climbers and a paramedic.
▪ The climbers who can be dangerous are always ego-driven, and I stay away from them.
▪ The astronauts shape up before their missions by working with small weights, and doing exercises designed for rock climbers.
▪ Who makes a profit from cramming more climbers on to our cliffs?
▪ Why so many climbers unwittingly created so much visual pollution?
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Climber

Climber \Climb"er\, n. One who, or that which, climbs:

  1. (Bot.) A plant that climbs.

  2. (Zo["o]l.) A bird that climbs, as a woodpecker or a parrot.

Climber

Climber \Climb"er\, v. i. [From Climb; cf. Clamber.] To climb; to mount with effort; to clamber. [Obs.]
--Tusser.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
climber

early 15c., "one who climbs," agent noun from climb (v.). Of plants, from 1630s.

Wiktionary
climber

Etymology 1 n. 1 One who climbs. 2 A plant that climbs, such as a vine. 3 A bird that climbs, such as a woodpecker or a parrot. Etymology 2

vb. (context obsolete English) To climb; to mount with effort; to clamber.

WordNet
climber
  1. n. a vine or climbing plant that readily grows up a support or over other plants

  2. someone seeking social prominence by obsequious behavior [syn: social climber]

  3. someone who ascends on foot; "a solitary mounter of the staircase" [syn: mounter]

  4. someone who climbs as a sport; especially someone who climbs mountains; "the lead climber looked strong still but his partner often slumped in his ropes"

  5. an iron spike attached to the shoe to prevent slipping on ice when walking or climbing [syn: crampon, crampoon, climbing iron]

Wikipedia
Climber (BEAM)

In BEAM robotics, a Climber is a robot that goes upward or downward with gradual or continuous progress on a track (such as a rope or wire).

Category:BEAM robotics

Climber

Climber may refer to:

  • Climber, a participant in the activity of climbing
  • Climber, general name for a vine
  • Climber, or climbing specialist, a road bicycle racer who can ride especially well on highly inclined roads
  • Climber (BEAM), a robot that goes upward or downward on a track
  • Climber (video game), by Nintendo
  • Climber (magazine), a British magazine dedicated to sport climbing
  • Climber Motor Company, a motor vehicle manufacturer in Arkansas
  • Climbers (novel), a 1989 novel by M. John Harrison
  • The Climber (1966 film), a Yugoslav drama film
  • The Climber (1975 film), an Italian crime film
  • Dynamic Sport Climber, a Polish paramotor design
  • The Climber, or Kokou no Hito, a Japanese climbing manga

Usage examples of "climber".

Cal had previously padded and thickened so that a man could wrap it around himself to belay another climber without being cut in half.

Slowly, discovering that the main mandibles on the right side hung useless, I hauled the climber back up the rope toward the belay, and saw when I reached it how the harness had almost worn through the pillar of ice.

The climber was methodical, working multi-pitch, shooting out spindles of wire ahead that buried and fused into the rock, testing the weight of the anchors, squatting to plant rivets beneath us, roping hexes into the cracks, taking the slack, testing, belaying, moving on.

When the climber occasionally loses sight of a leg in one of these treacherous holes, and feels a cold sensation in his foot, he learns that he has dipped into the sources of the Boquet, which emerges lower down into falls and rapids, and, recruited by creeping tributaries, goes brawling through the forest basin, and at last comes out an amiable and boatbearing stream in the valley of Elizabeth Town.

Blue trumpet flowers festooned the pillars of climbers that reached into the tops of the marulas, and from the valleys came the liquid call of the white-browed coucals, to join the sound of running water.

And if there are social climbers on the High Council who seek to bring wizardry into fashion again in the circles to which they aspire, you can believe that the rest of the Council could not be cozened to such a plan.

Yet here was the past held still and magnified, the gravel thin and dusted with weeds, the strange mossy stain still clinging obdurately to the foot of the front wall like verdigris, climbers taking light from windows, lichen patterning the roof, and the tulip-shaped yew still sporting a ruff of nettles.

She finds a ridge or fissure and pulls herself up and out, an expert climber overcoming an overhang.

Now he could hear the grunts and gasping of the climber, punctuated by stretches of silence as the man waited and listened for danger.

Miles Soper, Sam Coal, and Jim were the best climbers, but without assistance, weak as we all were, they found that they could not swarm up the trees.

Ollyett and I did not need to lift our little fingers any more than the Alpine climber whose last sentence has unkeyed the arch of the avalanche.

Wah is a vegetivorous climber, breeding and feeding chiefly on the ground, and having its retreat in holes and clefts of rock.

Lady Sillocks was a fierce climber, and she had not yet arrived near the top of the ladder.

Whenever this happened, Squiller automatically clamped himself more tightly to her head, like a climber clinging for dear life to a rock face.

That I could scale them I knew full well, but Tars Tarkas, with his mighty bulk and enormous weight, would find it a task possibly quite beyond his prowess or his skill, for Martians are at best but poor climbers.