drive
drive / drīv/ • v. (past drove / drōv/ ; past part. driv·en / ˈdrivən/ ) 1. [intr.] operate and control the direction and speed of a motor vehicle: he got into his car and drove off| they drove back into town. ∎ [tr.] own or use (a specified type of motor vehicle): Sue drives an old Chevy. ∎ [intr.] be licensed or competent to drive a motor vehicle: I take it you can drive? ∎ [tr.] convey (someone) in a vehicle, esp. a private car: Shelley drove him to the supermarket.2. [tr.] propel or carry along by force in a specified direction: the wind will drive you onshore. ∎ [intr.] (of wind, water, or snow) move or fall with great force: the snow drove against him. ∎ [tr.] (of a source of power) provide the energy to set and keep (an engine or piece of machinery) in motion: turbines driven by steam. ∎ Electr. (of a device) power or operate (another device): the interface can be used to drive a printer. ∎ [tr.] force (a stake or nail) into place by hitting or pushing it: nails are driven through the boards. ∎ [tr.] bore (a tunnel). ∎ (in ball games) hit or kick (the ball) hard with a free swing of the bat, racket, or foot. ∎ [tr.] Golf strike (a ball) from the tee, typically with a driver.3. [tr.] urge or force (animals or people) to move in a specified direction: they drove a flock of sheep through the center of the city. ∎ [tr.] urge forward and direct the course of (an animal drawing a vehicle or plow). ∎ [tr.] chase or frighten (wild animals) into nets, traps, or into a small area where they can be killed or captured: they were up on the hill before dawn, ready to drive the deer. ∎ compel to leave: troops drove out the demonstrators | he wanted to drive me away.4. [tr.] (usu. be driven) (of a fact or feeling) compel (someone) to act in a particular way, esp. one that is considered undesirable or inappropriate: he was driven by ambition | [tr.] some people are driven to murder their tormentors | [as adj.] (driven) my husband is a driven man. ∎ [tr.] bring (someone) forcibly into a specified negative state: the thought drove him to despair | [tr.] my laziness drives my wife crazy. ∎ [tr.] force (someone) to work to an excessive extent: you're driving yourself too hard.• n. 1. a trip or journey in a car: they went for a drive in the country. ∎ [in names] a street or road: Hammond Drive. ∎ short for driveway.2. Psychol. an innate, biologically determined urge to attain a goal or satisfy a need: her emotional and sexual drives. ∎ the determination and ambition of a person to achieve something: her drive has sustained her through some shattering personal experiences.3. an organized effort by a number of people to achieve a particular purpose, often to raise money: we're planning a massive membership drive. ∎ Football a series of offensive plays that advance the ball for the purpose of a score: an 80-yard scoring drive.4. the transmission of power to machinery or to the wheels of a motor vehicle. ∎ (in a car with automatic transmission) the position of the gear selector in which the car will move forward, changing gears automatically as required: he threw the car into drive. ∎ Comput. short for disk drive.5. (in ball games) a forceful stroke made with a free swing of the bat, racket, or foot against the ball. ∎ Golf a shot from the tee.6. an act of driving a group of animals to a particular destination.PHRASES: drive something home see home.what someone is driving at the point that someone is attempting to make: I don't understand what you're driving at.DERIVATIVES: driv·a·bil·i·ty / ˌdrīvəˈbilitē/ (also drive·a·bil·i·ty) n.driv·a·ble (also drive·a·ble) adj.
drive
drive gently over the stones traditional advice to the inexperienced; saying recorded from the early 18th century.
you can drive out Nature with a pitchfork, but she keeps on coming back proverbial saying, mid 16th century; originally, with reference to the Epistles of the Roman poet Horace (65–8 bc), ‘Naturam expelles furca, tamen usque recurret [You may drive out nature with a pitchfork, yet she'll be constantly running back].’
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Drive
Drive ★★ 1996 (R)
A technologically enhanced man (Dacascos), running from biotech corporate hitmen, offers a down-on-his-luck stranger (Hardison) $5 million to drive him from San Franscisco to L.A. And he won't take no for an answer. 99m/C VHS, DVD . Mark Dacascos, Kadeem Hardison, Brittany Murphy, John Pyper-Ferguson, Tracey Walter, James Shigeta, Masaya Kato; D: Steve Wang.
drive
drive
Hence drive sb. act of driving XVII; carriage road XIX.