iron horse
/'iaən'hɔ:s/
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. (Historical, circa 1840) A locomotive; specifically, an early term for a steam-powered railroad engine. This term was used metaphorically to describe the powerful, mechanical nature of the new invention, comparing it to a strong, tireless horse made of iron.
Usage Examples
- Noun:
- The arrival of the iron horse transformed travel and commerce across the continent.
- Pioneers spoke in awe of the iron horse crossing the plains.
Advanced Usage
- The term is almost exclusively used in a historical or literary context to evoke the era of early railroad expansion.
- It can be used metaphorically to represent industrialization, progress, or the encroachment of technology on traditional ways of life.
- The poet lamented the song of the iron horse replacing the silence of the wilderness.
Variants and Related Words
- Locomotive (n): The more standard and modern term for a powered rail vehicle.
- Steam engine (n): The type of engine that powered the original "iron horses."
Synonyms
- Locomotive
- Railroad engine
- Train engine
Idioms and Fixed Phrases
- While not a phrasal verb, the term "iron horse" itself is a fixed metaphorical phrase from the 19th century.
- It sometimes appears in the idiom "the age of the iron horse," referring to the period of rapid railroad development.
Noun
- (c. 1840) an early term for a locomotive