rope down
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Verb: - To descend a vertical or steep surface, such as a cliff or mountainside, by using a rope secured at the top and coiled around the body or passed through a friction device to control the speed of descent. This technique is a fundamental skill in climbing, caving, and rescue operations.
Usage
The verb "rope down" describes the controlled action of descending. It is typically used in the context of climbing, mountaineering, and technical rescue. - It is often used with a prepositional phrase beginning with "from" to indicate the starting point. - It can be used in various tenses (e.g., roping down, roped down).
Examples
- The rescue team had to rope down from the helicopter to reach the stranded hikers.
- After reaching the summit, the climbers prepared to rope down the other side of the ridge.
- She roped down the 50-meter cliff face with expert skill.
- Roping down into the deep crevasse was the only way to continue the expedition.
Advanced Usage
- Technical Descent: In technical climbing, "rope down" is synonymous with the more formal term "abseil" (British English) or "rappel" (American English). The process involves managing friction on the rope to descend safely.
- Imperative Form: Used to give instructions in a climbing context.
- "Rope down carefully; the rock is loose here."
Variants and Related Words
- Abseil (v): (Chiefly British) To descend a rock face or other near-vertical surface using a rope.
- Rappel (v): (Chiefly North American) To descend a rock face or other near-vertical surface using a rope.
- Descend (v): A more general term for moving downward.
Synonyms
- Abseil
- Rappel
- Lower oneself
Related Phrasal Verbs
- Rope up: To attach oneself to a rope, typically with other climbers, for safety while ascending or traversing.
- Before crossing the glacier, the team stopped to rope up.
Related Idioms
No common idioms are directly formed from the phrasal verb "rope down."
Verb
- lower oneself with a rope coiled around the body from a mountainside
- The ascent was easy--roping down the mountain would be much more difficult and dangerous
- You have to learn how to abseil when you want to do technical climbing