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drift
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
drift
I.verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a breeze drifts (=blows very gently)
▪ A cool breeze drifted through the window.
a drift of snow (=snow blown into a pile by the wind)
▪ Sheep became buried in six-foot drifts of snow.
a mist drifts (=moves slightly)
▪ A mist drifted over the marsh.
clouds drift/float (=move slowly)
▪ A few clouds drifted across the top of the mountains.
continental drift
drift in and out of consciousness (=be awake and then not awake, and then awake again, etc)
▪ He had a high temperature and was drifting in and out of consciousness.
drift in and out of sleep (=keep almost waking up)
▪ I lay in the garden, drifting in and out of sleep.
drift/drop off to sleep (=start sleeping, especially without meaning to)
▪ She’d drifted off to sleep on the sofa.
smoke drifts
▪ The cigarette smoke drifted away on the breeze.
snow drifts (=is blown into deep piles)
▪ The snow had drifted up against the hedge.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
along
▪ Behind her the enchanted dancers spun on; the focus of the circle was now drifting along a violet-lit corridor.
▪ Sometimes Alek rented a boat alone and let it drift along the river past their building.
▪ Instead of drifting along the ceiling of the corridor, the smoke moves along as a solid plug.
▪ He was drifting along, looking half asleep, hands still over his ears.
▪ A watery mist drifted along the corridors of the castle.
▪ Barges rocked gently in front of the Town Hall, the smell of fish drifted along the river wharf.
▪ A smell that made him think of disinfectant drifted along the street to mock him.
apart
▪ Later in life, Lewis and his father drifted apart, never to be reconciled.
▪ We grew up, went off to different places, drifted apart.
▪ Jabbing with the point he kept off Alexei's attack until the reaction of their mid-air collision made them drift apart again.
▪ If there is any twosome in a family likely to drift apart, it is a pair of brothers.
▪ If you do nothing, there's a danger you could drift apart.
▪ Amelia was still engaged to Sam Chapman, but in fact she had been drifting apart from him for some time.
▪ Without the cement of regular meetings or contact, they gradually began to drift apart.
▪ Where languages grow most unlike one another as they drift apart is in the shapes of their words.
around
▪ Chopra could sense ghosts drifting around the castle.
▪ Without other references to compare it with, the light seemed to drift around in the blackness.
▪ At one school during a parents' coffee morning the conversation drifted around to the subject to school uniform.
▪ But she could smell the danger; it drifted around her like a pungent perfume.
▪ We drift around looking the place over for accommodation, eventually selecting a wooden building called Sand Dune Apartments.
▪ Her famine leanness was softened by all the scarlet hair drifting around her.
away
▪ As the oar disappeared into the distance, his last chance of returning to the team's hotel with dignity drifted away.
▪ Now that managed funds are doing somewhat better, will investors drift away from index funds?
▪ Some of these girls might, however, drift away again when they reach their crisis period.
▪ If the system started to drift away from the requirements of a coral reef, Gomez would flush the trays.
▪ As a result circulation has fallen by half, and big advertisers have drifted away.
▪ Spectators along the road drifted away as Wasiqi made his way through the course.
▪ Then, inexplicably, I had been out of work for over a year and my few friends were drifting away.
▪ The downturn in the energy industry dragged on so long that workers drifted away and oil field equipment became outdated.
back
▪ He had been drifting back and forth between the two ever since.
▪ As the submersible glides over them, clouds of orange dust rise, swirl about, and slowly drift back down.
▪ He hasn't drifted back to his own place yet, eh?
▪ At sundown the men drifted back from the fields exhausted and steaming.
▪ The brain drifts back to full consciousness now that there is a vague hint of light spreading across the eastern sky.
▪ When reports began to drift back from pentecostal revivals abroad, the flaming marvels became even more spectacular.
▪ Her thoughts drifted back to Spike, the metal man, who had been killed less than an hour ago.
▪ But she largely drifted back to B pictures until the Riley series was resurrected in 1953.
by
▪ It took just one of the party girls to drift by and break up his life.
▪ The heat shimmering over the asphalt had no snap to it; time drifted by.
▪ Another four years would drift by, and she would still be tied to Julius Landor.
▪ Minutes drifted by in silence that was sweet to us.
▪ Streetlights and shop windows are like stars drifting by.
▪ There may be some high clouds drifting by during the afternoon.
▪ Kenneth Clarke drifted by under his Home Secretarial escort.
▪ Al Maghrun airfield drifted by on the right.
down
▪ By the end of our conversation the other players were drifting down to dinner.
▪ I saw her drift down through the steam; she stuck in her elbow.
▪ And the rich, savoury smell of the hare drifted down to meet her, turning her stomach.
▪ Slowly it drifts down across the sea-curled weeds, the anchored life of the marine world.
▪ The emphasis has to be on quality not quantity, otherwise the game will drift down a cul-de-sac of mediocrity.
▪ It had begun to snow, and small flakes were drifting down to settle on their eyelashes.
▪ His hands drifted down my neck and settled on my shoulders.
further
▪ This nearly always results in drifting further back without much gain of height and ending up in a worse situation than before.
▪ We felt as if we were driving into the heart of the wilderness, our deadlines drifting further and further away.
▪ The second submarine was being attacked now, but all the time the sound of combat was drifting further away.
in
▪ One theory is that the oil has sunk, and is drifting in globules a few metres below the surface of the water.
▪ Cold air drifted in through the front door.
▪ As they waited, other women drifted in and joined the madres.
▪ Who's to say who drifted in, and then drifted out?
▪ She leaned out of the window, trying to enjoy the fresher air; a scent of burning rubber drifted in.
▪ Various actors and entertainers drifted in and out of the Rat Pack.
▪ What if it hadn't drifted in by accident?
off
▪ They would start coming in late and drifting off early.
▪ Basically people curled up wherever they found themselves and drifted off.
▪ When he drifted off to sleep at last Henry's cheeks were quite pink with shame.
▪ After he drifted off I got up from my typewriter, knelt beside the couch and stared at his face.
▪ Large as icebergs they drifted off to the north carrying the remaining followers of the Witch King.
▪ Many see their first shooting star, and with that, drift off to never-never land.
▪ Perhaps she drifted off in the bath.
▪ Finally he would stretch out, his breathing would become more regular and he would drift off.
on
▪ Between searingly bright periods, the sky boils with thundery clouds that drift on by without releasing a drop.
▪ Then the van rolls forward, gathers speed, and drifts on by.
▪ Perhaps we should think about it, instead of drifting on from day to day.
▪ The purplish thing drifted on to the beach, but I felt too lazy to walk over and examine it.
▪ And so, essentially, this grey situation drifts on-whilst the most basic question of all emerges.
▪ If the paddler builds up speed and then stops paddling, the boat will drift on in a straight line.
▪ So the party drifted on, groups finding each other, merging and then subdividing to make other groups.
▪ He drifted on upwards at an angle.
out
▪ Eventually we drift out into the leafy park behind the museum.
▪ Louis music drifts out of clubs large and small throughout the city.
▪ Or sometimes, did not drift out?
▪ Primo had drifted out of the conversation.
▪ She stepped aside into the doorway of the next room while Luch drifted out and down the stair.
▪ Twenty-four hours until kick-off and the hyperbole was drifting out of control.
▪ Awards over and bottles emptied, marketing's great and good drifted out into the night.
▪ The thief drifts out towards the door.
over
▪ Tiny feathers of cloud drifted over the horizon like a flock of fire-birds.
▪ The chatter of playing children drifted over from the tent village beside the rows of parked trucks.
▪ She woke slowly from a vague dream as an errant breeze drifted over her face, coming to rest on her mouth.
▪ Women began drifting over to the table.
▪ Smoke that smelt of churches poured from the wicks, drifted over the slowly heaving ocean, hid their feet.
▪ Clouds drifted over to veil the almost full moon, and I heard somewhere from Gammon Ridge a deep, howling wail.
▪ He sat back and let their conversation drift over him.
▪ By morning thick clouds drift over, but the sky between them is deep blue and occasionally the sun peeks through.
slowly
▪ A fine trail of dust dislodged from the door frame and drifted slowly to the ground.
▪ As the submersible glides over them, clouds of orange dust rise, swirl about, and slowly drift back down.
▪ He'd made a good start but now he was faltering, and the focus of attention was drifting slowly away from him.
▪ She watched it with pity and horror in her heart as it drifted slowly toward her.
▪ The sudden breeze introduced through the open door disturbed the orbit of the drone and sent the Doctor drifting slowly backwards.
▪ The flickering insect halo began to drift slowly away, keeping a constant six feet above the earth.
▪ In mid-stream Meg let Ben take the oars from her, changing seats with him nimbly as the boat drifted slowly about.
▪ Vass regarded her flushed face, then let his eyes drift slowly down the length of her slender, dressing-gown-clad figure.
up
▪ Superstitions and visions drifted up through the tribes and peoples like evening mists along the Nile.
▪ I got up to close it, and a faint, almost imaginary hum of traffic drifted up out of the valley.
▪ A long groan drifted up the steps.
▪ As we began our dive, smoke drifted up from the jungle ahead of us.
▪ As the ground drifted up he saw the barbarian standing stock still, chest heaving, arms hanging loosely by his sides.
▪ The fragrance of new millet drifted up on a southwestern breeze, reminding him that harvest was approaching.
▪ Voices drifted up through the floorboards every Thursday night.
▪ He let his eyes drift up.
■ NOUN
boat
▪ Today, two empty boats are drifting home across the hollow fields of fished-out sea.
▪ The boat I stole was drifting down the river, not that I cared, with my blouse and shoes in it.
▪ The boat was drifting into the current, the long poles dipping in the dark water and pushing her away.
▪ It looked as if the caracara would polish off the duck; but our boat drifting nearer made it nervous.
▪ When the Halliday brothers eventually sighted Johnstone, the boat was drifting aimlessly with the tide.
▪ In mid-stream Meg let Ben take the oars from her, changing seats with him nimbly as the boat drifted slowly about.
▪ He brought her into focus, letting the boat drift out of mind.
▪ I stopped the boat and drifted as near as I dared.
cloud
▪ Between searingly bright periods, the sky boils with thundery clouds that drift on by without releasing a drop.
▪ As the road climbed upward, gray-white cloud veils drifted among the dales, chiffon scarves of some giant Isadora Duncan.
▪ Tiny feathers of cloud drifted over the horizon like a flock of fire-birds.
▪ By morning thick clouds drift over, but the sky between them is deep blue and occasionally the sun peeks through.
▪ It was a mild night with clouds drifting across the sky and occasionally obscuring the new moon.
▪ There may be some high clouds drifting by during the afternoon.
▪ Next, look up at the blue sky - and notice a small, dark cloud drifting past.
▪ Rise above the landscape, and experience yourself as the whole sky - with clouds drifting inconsequentially through your vastness.
consciousness
▪ The brain drifts back to full consciousness now that there is a vague hint of light spreading across the eastern sky.
▪ He is thought to have a fractured skull and is drifting in and out of consciousness.
conversation
▪ In no time the conversation drifted naturally to him and Rosemary.
▪ He sat back and let their conversation drift over him.
▪ There was the hum of cars up on the main road. Conversation drifted over you as families sauntered by.
▪ At one school during a parents' coffee morning the conversation drifted around to the subject to school uniform.
gaze
▪ Idly, he let his gaze drift across the horizon.
mind
▪ His hands were automatically driving, but his mind was drifting elsewhere.
▪ Her mind drifted and blanked, refusing her efforts to focus.
▪ Her mind drifted back to the first day they'd seen Crystal Springs.
▪ The shit that could be on his mind drifts upward and stays up there until he finally stands still.
▪ Her mind was drifting on the waves of her pain.
▪ She tried to think of nothing at all, but found her mind drifting back to that one subject all the time.
▪ Frowning, she let her mind drift back to the events of two years ago.
▪ His mind drifted away on the tides of the kif, and then floated back.
mist
▪ Snake-like curls of mist drifted downwards.
▪ Prom somewhere, and none could say quite where, a mist began to drift.
▪ A watery mist drifted along the corridors of the castle.
▪ January: mist drifts over the fields, deepening like water.
night
▪ It was a mild night with clouds drifting across the sky and occasionally obscuring the new moon.
▪ Through the haze of sleep, vague details of last night began drifting into her mind.
▪ He had lain in bed night after night drifting into sleep on a tide of euphoria.
▪ Various schemes were mooted for the night, various groups drifted in and out.
river
▪ It must have drifted down the river.
▪ The boat I stole was drifting down the river, not that I cared, with my blouse and shoes in it.
▪ They were now drifting down river much faster than before.
▪ Sometimes Alek rented a boat alone and let it drift along the river past their building.
▪ Barges rocked gently in front of the Town Hall, the smell of fish drifted along the river wharf.
room
▪ A gentle Mozart sonata drifted round the room.
▪ He drifts through the living room toward the windows, apparently to check the view.
▪ She would drift listlessly about the rooms, her dreams extinguished.
▪ People come drifting into the room to see what's up.
▪ The passengers drifted in from their rooms and the dome car and fell into by now predictable patterns of seating.
▪ Acrid fumes from the gunfire drifted round the silent room.
sea
▪ It reproduces by releasing single-celled spores which drift off in the sea and grow into new plants.
▪ A few chuckles and snatches of song could be heard drifting across the sea of sheep, then silence.
sleep
▪ Even if the man drifted close to sleep, which the stillness encouraged, the union remained unbroken.
▪ She had passed out there-or perhaps just lain down and drifted into sleep.
▪ Whenever he drifts toward sleep he feels close to distinguishing the words.
▪ As soon as she drifted into sleep, she was back in the Close, her gaze locked on the white huddled figure.
▪ Bobby must have drifted into sleep for he was wakened by a knock at the door.
▪ Tired after two performances that day, she began to drift between sleep and wakefulness.
▪ With the sedative, Marek drifted into sleep but he did not wake up.
smell
▪ And the rich, savoury smell of the hare drifted down to meet her, turning her stomach.
▪ As the smell of fresh paint drifted through the air it became linked for us with summer and liberty.
▪ A faint smell of frying bacon drifted up from the kitchen.
▪ The smell of the smoke drifted back towards Cassie across the garden.
▪ The smell of evil embrocation drifted up even as high as the clouds of Heaven.
▪ Barges rocked gently in front of the Town Hall, the smell of fish drifted along the river wharf.
smoke
▪ Trails of blue cigarette smoke would drift tentatively upward.
▪ As we began our dive, smoke drifted up from the jungle ahead of us.
▪ The smell of the smoke drifted back towards Cassie across the garden.
▪ The wind lifts the smoke and drifts it away....
▪ Unseen in the wild night, the occasional wisp of smoke drifted among the trunks.
▪ A light wind sprang up, and the smoke of their guns drifted over the valley towards the cemetery.
▪ They made towards it as the first flare hit the sea, continuing to burn, with clouds of smoke drifting upwards.
▪ The smoke drifted lazily away to the westward, revealing to us the gray lines steadily advancing...
sound
▪ Glancing around, she deduced from the sounds drifting from the kitchen that Tara was preparing a meal.
▪ The others nodded, made agreeable sounds, and drifted off down the corridor.
▪ She fell asleep to the sound of music drifting upwards from the drawing-room.
▪ A loud crash could be heard from the room and the sound of wailing drifted into the courtroom, startling onlookers.
▪ The sound of singing came drifting up from the quays below.
▪ The sound of hammering drifted down from Fernbank.
▪ The second submarine was being attacked now, but all the time the sound of combat was drifting further away.
▪ It was still very early and the village of Axe was quiet, but morning sounds drifted faintly to her ears.
thought
▪ Her thoughts drifted, but she was not asleep.
▪ Time and again his thoughts would begin to drift, and soon thereafter his steps would follow suit.
▪ Her thoughts drifted back to Spike, the metal man, who had been killed less than an hour ago.
▪ Her thoughts drifted to when she herself had been seventeen.
▪ His thoughts drifted back to the Connons.
▪ His thoughts kept drifting back to Zoser.
▪ But the daggers had remained sheathed during the meal, and she had allowed her thoughts to drift into those glittering waters.
voice
▪ Less than a minute later noise erupted from the drawing room and excited voices drifted down the hall.
▪ Once or twice he found himself tugged away on the backwash of voices, drifting here and there.
wind
▪ Every angle, line and contour were gently rounded as though the snow had drifted slightly in the wind.
▪ The scents of its rare grasses and reeds drift gently on the wind bringing calm and tranquillity to its banks.
window
▪ At first she could see only a shape drifting before the windows on the first floor.
▪ Birdsong drifted through the open window and a breeze puffed out the curtains.
▪ The voice of Miss Norman, the games teacher, drifted in at the window now and again.
▪ Marge helped serve coffee and triple-layer cake from the old highboy, as the scent of roses drifted through the open windows.
▪ Coolness drifted in the window, and a fragrance of wet grass.
■ VERB
allow
▪ Unfortunately, the legal aid statistics have not provided the direct evidence that the levels have been allowed to drift.
▪ It can not be allowed to drift into complacency.
▪ Susan allowed the ship to drift down, and relaxed as the bulk settled into the receptive, motherly ground.
▪ Disrupting the pavement also allows sand dunes to drift into habitable areas.
▪ Don't allow your attention to drift.
▪ Houseplants should be allowed to drift into semi-dormancy.
▪ But the daggers had remained sheathed during the meal, and she had allowed her thoughts to drift into those glittering waters.
▪ The district health authority could not be in a better position because it allowed the situation to drift.
begin
▪ When Bath won an attacking scrum on the right and Swift began to drift across his marker did not follow him.
▪ Women began drifting over to the table.
▪ The excitement died away and the crowd began to drift off down the side streets.
▪ Time and again his thoughts would begin to drift, and soon thereafter his steps would follow suit.
▪ At this point the Arsenal fans began to drift home, their evening well and truly over.
▪ When reports began to drift back from pentecostal revivals abroad, the flaming marvels became even more spectacular.
▪ Materials and food prices began to drift downwards from the summer of 1973.
▪ After several weeks of disrupted business, the dealers began to drift away.
let
▪ He sat back and let their conversation drift over him.
▪ If you have an agitated mind, the tension in your body is not going to let you drift off.
▪ Casually she let her scarf drift to the ground.
▪ He let his eyes drift up.
▪ An odd kind of row, he mused, letting himself drift.
▪ Sometimes Alek rented a boat alone and let it drift along the river past their building.
▪ Snuggling into Patrick, she closed her eyes and let the memories drift in front of her closed lids.
▪ Vass regarded her flushed face, then let his eyes drift slowly down the length of her slender, dressing-gown-clad figure.
seem
▪ A fleeting, hard look seemed to drift across her eyes.
▪ We seemed to drift into tranquility once we reached the long plateau stretch on the high road to Taos.
▪ According to our panel all three parties, including Labour, seemed to drift away from the issue as the campaign progressed.
▪ She noticed that everyone seemed to have drifted a little closer; was talking a little less, watching their backs.
▪ Fred seems to have drifted off into a half-lit world.
▪ Without other references to compare it with, the light seemed to drift around in the blackness.
▪ The fine mist at the edges of the room seemed to be drifting closer, enveloping her in its clinging tendrils.
▪ For a time it overcame her, and she seemed to drift in black depths.
start
▪ I got it when things started drifting away from us around February time.
▪ If the system started to drift away from the requirements of a coral reef, Gomez would flush the trays.
▪ But this was not enough to keep away mosquitoes, which started to arrive and drift towards the flames.
▪ Gradually they started drifting away to the main building to eat and sleep.
▪ As a result she starts to drift through space in the opposite direction.
▪ He should have enough time to finish his drink and be away before his fellow-officers started to drift in.
tend
▪ Each follows the inputs nearer to it and tends to drift away from other nodes.
▪ The problem is that the meaning of a sentence tends to drift off into what linguists would call the Indeterminate Adverbial Phrase.
▪ Answer guide: If concise objectives are not set organizations will tend to drift a long not knowing where they are going.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
grow/drift apart
▪ I think Dan and Tina just grew apart.
▪ If there is any twosome in a family likely to drift apart, it is a pair of brothers.
▪ Instead, it was suggested the couple, who married in their early 20s, had simply grown up and grown apart.
▪ Jabbing with the point he kept off Alexei's attack until the reaction of their mid-air collision made them drift apart again.
▪ Later in life, Lewis and his father drifted apart, never to be reconciled.
▪ Such barrenness is the inevitable outcome where two people are growing apart and out of love.
▪ We grew up, went off to different places, drifted apart.
▪ Work-inhibited students have not grown apart from their parents and become independent.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ All night Julie drifted in and out of consciousness.
▪ Vargas Llosa's politics gradually drifted to the right.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A fine trail of dust dislodged from the door frame and drifted slowly to the ground.
▪ Gradually they started drifting away to the main building to eat and sleep.
▪ I walked at his side as if I were drunk, bumping into him, drifting crazily off.
▪ Ideas drifted quietly like falling petals into his mind.
▪ It felt as though she'd drifted into some dreamlike watery paradise.
▪ The smoke drifted lazily away to the westward, revealing to us the gray lines steadily advancing...
▪ They presently look like a team that could drift farther into oblivion each week.
▪ We will pay special attention to the underlying social problems in high-crime areas, particularly to prevent young people drifting into crime.
II.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
snow
▪ A snow drift of paper is going to hit it.
▪ His presidential hopes thus suffered a fatal blow in the snow drifts of New Hampshire.
▪ Mountain goats have to contend with narrow ice-covered ledges, deep snow drifts and avalanches.
■ VERB
catch
▪ She could feel the red stain crawl up her neck as she caught his drift.
▪ Right from Huntington Beach, if you catch the drift.
▪ There are more where that came from, but you will easily catch the drift.
▪ The old man craned his head to catch a drift of the conversation.
▪ He caught the drift of her thoughts, she could tell.
▪ She wiped her eyes with a lace handkerchief and he caught the drift of her exotic scent.
▪ Some of the other children were sitting up, alert now, as they caught the drift of what he was saying.
▪ If you catch my on-shore drift.
get
▪ The flush in the pocket types, then bought hot sausages on sticks. Get my drift.
▪ Rules of engagement there are, but like I say, freedom of action, if you get my drift.
▪ I've forgotten when I was last there. Get my drift?
▪ No, but-do you get my drift?
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ All the roads to Denver were blocked by snow drifts.
▪ I follow your drift, but I just don't believe it.
▪ It was a complicated argument but I think I caught his drift.
▪ The drift of his letter is that he wants to come back.
▪ The party has experienced a drift toward the right in the last two years.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ He was breathing, but his leg was a mess, must have been hit on the drift down.
▪ High winds were becoming a problem, blowing snow into drifts 3 to 5 feet high in places.
▪ His presidential hopes thus suffered a fatal blow in the snow drifts of New Hampshire.
▪ Make sure that you correct the drift before touch down and then be prepared to prevent the swing into wind.
▪ The drifts were granulated and shrinking under my eyes.
▪ The endless drift from the past to the future.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
drift

Adit \Ad"it\, n. [L. aditus, fr. adire, ?aitum, to go to; ad + ire to go.]

  1. An entrance or passage. Specifically: The nearly horizontal opening by which a mine is entered, or by which water and ores are carried away; -- called also drift and tunnel.

  2. Admission; approach; access. [R.]

    Yourself and yours shall have Free adit.
    --Tennyson.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
drift

c.1300, literally "a being driven" (of snow, etc.); not recorded in Old English; either a suffixed form of drive (v.) (compare thrift/thrive) or borrowed from Old Norse drift "snow drift," or Middle Dutch drift "pasturage, drove, flock," both from Proto-Germanic *driftiz (cognates: Danish and Swedish drift, German Trift), from PIE root *dhreibh- "to drive, push" (see drive (v.)). Sense of "what one is getting at" is from 1520s. Meaning "controlled slide of a sports car" attested by 1955.

drift

late 16c., from drift (n.). Figurative sense of "be passive and listless" is from 1822. Related: Drifted; drifting.

Wiktionary
drift

n. 1 (label en physical) Movement; that which moves or is moved. 2 # (label en obsolete) A driving; a violent movement. 3 # course or direction along which anything is driven; setting. 4 # That which is driven, forced, or urged along. vb. (label en intransitive) To move slowly, especially pushed by currents of water, air, etc.

WordNet
drift
  1. v. be in motion due to some air or water current; "The leaves were blowing in the wind"; "the boat drifted on the lake"; "The sailboat was adrift on the open sea"; "the shipwrecked boat drifted away from the shore" [syn: float, be adrift, blow]

  2. wander from a direct course or at random; "The child strayed from the path and her parents lost sight of her"; "don't drift from the set course" [syn: stray, err]

  3. move about aimlessly or without any destination, often in search of food or employment; "The gypsies roamed the woods"; "roving vagabonds"; "the wandering Jew"; "The cattle roam across the prairie"; "the laborers drift from one town to the next"; "They rolled from town to town" [syn: roll, wander, swan, stray, tramp, roam, cast, ramble, rove, range, vagabond]

  4. vary or move from a fixed point or course; "stock prices are drifting higher"

  5. live unhurriedly, irresponsibly, or freely; "My son drifted around for years in California before going to law school" [syn: freewheel]

  6. move in an unhurried fashion; "The unknown young man drifted among the invited guests"

  7. cause to be carried by a current; "drift the boats downstream"

  8. drive slowly and far afield for grazing; "drift the cattle herds westwards"

  9. be subject to fluctuation; "The stock market drifted upward"

  10. be piled up in banks or heaps by the force of wind or a current; "snow drifting several feet high"; "sand drifting like snow"

drift
  1. n. a force that moves something along [syn: impetus, impulsion]

  2. the gradual departure from an intended course due to external influences (as a ship or plane)

  3. a process of linguistic change over a period of time

  4. something that is heaped up by the wind or by water currents

  5. a general tendency to change (as of opinion); "not openly liberal but that is the trend of the book"; "a broad movement of the electorate to the right" [syn: trend, movement]

  6. general meaning or tenor; "caught the drift of the conversation" [syn: purport]

  7. a horizontal (or nearly horizontal) passageway in a mine; "they dug a drift parallel with the vein" [syn: heading, gallery]

Wikipedia
Drift
Drift or Drifts may refer to:
Drift (linguistics)

Two types of language change can be characterized as linguistic drift: a unidirectional short-term and cyclic long-term drift.

Drift (telecommunication)

In telecommunication, a drift is a comparatively long-term change in an attribute, value, or operational parameter of a system or equipment. The drift should be characterized, such as "diurnal frequency drift" and "output level drift." Drift is usually undesirable and unidirectional, but may be bidirectional, cyclic, or of such long-term duration and low excursion rate as to be negligible.

Drift is also common in pseudo-synchronised streaming applications, such as low-latency audio streaming over TCP/IP. Normally both ends of a streaming connection would stay in-sync with a master clock but TCP/IP does not provide this 'master clock' mechanism. Therefore applications running fixed clocks will drift apart over time and glitches will occur. This is usually fixed by controlling jitter or drift, by slightly altering the clock speed at one end of the connection.

Drift (geology)

In geology, drift is the name for all material of glacial origin found anywhere on land or at sea, including sediment and large rocks ( glacial erratic). Glacial origin refers to erosion, transportation and deposition by glaciers.

In the UK the term 'drift' is commonly used to describe any deposits of Quaternary age.

The Driftless Area refers to an unglaciated portion of North America devoid of the glacial drift of surrounding regions.

Drift (novel)

Drift is a BBC Books original novel written by Simon A. Forward and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Fourth Doctor and Leela.

Drift (Flotsam and Jetsam album)

Drift is the fifth album by Flotsam and Jetsam released on April 25, 1995.

It was re-released on June 10, 2008 by Metal Mind Productions. This release is remastered with three bonus tracks and limited to 2000 copies. The re-release also contains new packaging and liner notes from the band members Eric A.K., Jason Ward and Ed Carlson.

Drift (Ken Block album)

Drift, released December 9, 2008, is the debut solo album by Sister Hazel's lead singer and acoustic guitarist Ken Block.

Drift (Transformers)

Drift is the name of three different fictional characters in the Transformers franchise. For trademark reasons, toys related to the character are marketed under the name Autobot Drift.

Drift (film series)

The film series consist of street racing films produced by Geneon Universal Entertainment released between 2006 and 2008. All the films are set on racing touge roads.

Drift (Nosaj Thing album)

Drift is the first studio album from American electronic musician Nosaj Thing. It was released on Alpha Pup Records on June 9, 2009. A remix of the album, Drift (Remixed), was released November 2, 2010 on the same label.

Drift (2013 Australian film)

Drift is a 2013 Australian film about the birth of the surf industry in the 1970s. It was shot in Western Australia and co-directed by Morgan O'Neill and Ben Nott and starring Sam Worthington, Xavier Samuel and Myles Pollard.

Drift (2013 Belgian film)

Drift is a 2014 Belgium art house film about a couple that waits in an empty hotel in the Romanian Carpathian mountains. The modern ruins of post-communist Romania form the backdrop for a man’s quest for redemption and, possibly, punishment following his wife’s death after a long illness. It is directed by Benny Vandendriessche, with the storyline conceived from the performance art by performance artist Dirk Hendrikx. The film was produced by Peter Krüger for Inti Films and Raymond van der Kaaij for Revolver Media and stars Dirk Hendrikx, Lieve Meeusen and Constantin Cojocaru in principal roles. Drift is an esoteric and somewhat opaque meditation on loss and grief.

The film had its world premiere at the Busan International Film Festival, and won the FIPRESCI award at the International Film Festival.

Usage examples of "drift".

Other officers were standing by radar and radar altimeter, NST transceiver, drift indicator, accelerometer, and all the rest of it.

They feel they may as well drift along through adolescence and wait for the light to turn green.

Until now, as it had grown and matured, it had lived adventitiously, drifting with the currents, eating whatever food came its way.

He had, in fact, crossed the designs of no less a power than the German Empire, he had blundered into the hot focus of Welt-Politik, he was drifting helplessly towards the great Imperial secret, the immense aeronautic park that had been established at a headlong pace in Franconia to develop silently, swiftly, and on an immense scale the great discoveries of Hunstedt and Stossel, and so to give Germany before all other nations a fleet of airships, the air power and the Empire of the world.

Bogaert had felled most of the closest trees, but the slight drift of the aerosol out of the forest still brought enough enzyme to promote the destruction of most of their garments.

It may be a world captured from afara lonely wanderer cast off from some other star, captured by the Sun after millions of years of drifting lightless through space.

The sky was heavy with drifting masses of cloud, aflare with red and gold and all the sunset colours, from the black line of coast, lying in the west, far into the east, where sea and sky were turning gray.

Therefore did I drift down into a treetop and clambered down into their midst, the less to afright them.

Snow drifting down on us, the lights of the tree merry and bright, three men shot to pieces, a bear down, and one heathen whose mind had gone for a long walk, wandering aimlessly in the darkness which had engulfed us all.

Timothy spun to see Lord Nicodemus descending the stairs toward them with Alastor in his arms, a roiling cloud of supernatural energies drifting behind and above him.

A fat old Albacore shark swam past us, blotched and piebald like a pig, but he paid us no attention and I lowered the spear as he drifted away into the hazy distance.

The bath attendant drifted hesitantly back as Alec finished dressing, offering him a tray of oils and combs.

Drifting like shadows across the ground the Amar crept toward the Egg.

As difficult as it proved to be, she sought to lend her attention to what she was actually seeing rather than the warmly titillating ambience through which she had just drifted.

The final video in the Anabasis files showed Nimrod drifting down the shaft toward the waiting team.