switchbladed

English

Verb

switchbladed

  1. simple past and past participle of switchblade

Adjective

switchbladed (not comparable)

  1. Armed or equipped with a switchblade.
    • 1960, Federal Probation News Letter, page 31:
      For at night, into the back of our stores and restful suburbs come these quiet, switchbladed ambassadors to remind us that the boundary issues are not yet settled.
    • 1967, The Dynamics of Change, page 32:
      Like small children at play, we use the lids of our well-filled garbage cans as a shield, and the T-bone from our latest steak as a sword, and we face this switchbladed Thing in the dark alleys of the world.
    • 1983, “Virgin Islands dive: Exploring the environment”, in Newsweek, volume 102, numbers 1-9, page 301:
      The Force being taken, he'll have to settle for The Glaive, a golden switchbladed boomerang that can do just about anything but salvage this $27 million mishmash of mythical cliches.
  2. Sharp or cutting.
    • 1968, Lazar Sarna, The Singsong:
      And the sky's eyebrow is mine that rises at the switchbladed wind.
    • 2005, D. H. Melhem, New York Poems, →ISBN, page 86:
      up here switchbladed laughter pricks at skin better run it will slice you down to mouths studding the ground like pores
    • 1983, Pacita Guevara-Fernandez, Keeping the Flame Alive: Essays in the Humanities:
      Neruda was now completely preoccupied with writing Odes to Washerwomen, to Dead Millionaires and a switchbladed bit of verse called The United Fruit Company.
    • 1997, Erich Leinsdorf, Erich Leinsdorf on Music, page 74:
      Thus his switchbladed pencil marked VI-DE over page 292, which happens to be the great waltz at the end of act 2 and rivals the act 3 trio in popularity.
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