Find the word definition

Crossword clues for conveyer

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Conveyer

Conveyer \Con*vey"er\, n.

  1. One who, or that which, conveys or carries, transmits or transfers.

  2. One given to artifices or secret practices; a juggler; a cheat; a thief. [Obs.]
    --Shak.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
conveyer

1510s, agent noun from convey. Latinate form conveyor is later (1640s).

Wiktionary
conveyer

n. (context rare English) (alternative spelling of conveyor English)

WordNet
conveyer
  1. n. a person who conveys (carries or transmits); "the conveyer of good tidings" [syn: conveyor]

  2. a moving belt that transports objects (as in a factory) [syn: conveyer belt, conveyor belt, conveyor, transporter]

Wikipedia
Conveyer (band)

Conveyer is an American Christian hardcore and Christian metalcore band, and they play a version of hardcore punk, metalcore, melodic hardcore, melodic metalcore, post-hardcore, grindcore and screamo. They come from Minneapolis, Minnesota and Saint Paul, Minnesota, where they were formerly based in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, with two of their members hailing from Indianapolis, Indiana. The band started making music in 2011. They have released one independently made album, Worn Out in 2013, and a studio album, When Given Time to Grow, in 2015, with Victory Records. Their former vocalist, Carter Daniels, left the band in 2014, and he was replaced by Danny Adams from Indiana. band, and they play a version of hardcore punk, metalcore, melodic hardcore, melodic metalcore, post-hardcore, grindcore and screamo. They come from Minneapolis, Minnesota and Saint Paul, Minnesota, where they were formerly based in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, with two of their members hailing from Indianapolis, Indiana. The band started making music in 2011. They have released one independently made album, Worn Out in 2013, and a studio album, When Given Time to Grow, in 2015, with Victory Records. Their former vocalist, Carter Daniels, left the band in 2014, and he was replaced by Danny Adams from Indiana.

Usage examples of "conveyer".

There was a fifty-foot conveyer dome inside, and a fifty-foot redlined circle that marked the transposition point of an outtime conveyer.

The ring of conveyers at three thousand feet were opening and spewing out aircars and airboats, farther away, the greater ring of heavy conveyers were unloading armored and shielded combat-craft.

At once, all the other conveyers which were on antigrav began flashing and vanishing.

Sleth, dropping to the bottom of the antigrav shaft, cast a hasty and instinctive glance to the right, where the freight conveyers were.

North America was a center of civilization on many paratemporal sectors, and while the conveyer heads of the commercial and passenger companies were scattered over hundreds of Fifth Level time lines, those of the Paratime Police were concentrated upon one.

The braiders, the welders, the punch presses, the lathes, the conveyers - everything in sight, almost, had been around in Edison's time.

A couple of others were moving along a different gravel path toward the lifters, conveyers, and compactors in the recycling and .

They must have at least two two-hundred-foot conveyers and several small ones, and bases on what sounds like some Fifth Level Time line, and at least one air freighter of around five thousand tons.

Directly over the spatial equivalent of the Kholghoor Sector Wizard Traders' conveyers was the single disk of Verkan Vall's command conveyer, at a represented five thousand feet, and in a half-mile circle around it were the five news service conveyors.

Then he walked to the mesh-covered dome of the hundred-foot conveyer, with the five news service conveyers surrounding it in as regular a circle as the buildings and towers of the regular conveyer heads would permit.

A public-address speaker began yelping, in a hundred voices all over the area, warning those who were going with the conveyers to get aboard.

There was not another of the conveyers in sight, but electronic and mechanical lag in the individual controls and even the distance-difference between them, and the central radio control would have prevented them from going into transposition at the same fractional microsecond.

There were spaces for fifty conveyers around it, and all but eight of them were in place.

At the smaller conveyer building, there were no conveyers, only a number of red-lined fifty-foot circles around a central two-hundred-foot circle.

At the slave pens, a string of two-hundred-foot conveyers, having unloaded soldiers and fighting-gear, were coming in to take on unconscious slaves for transposition to Police Terminal.