magnet

/ˈmæɡnət/

UK: /ˈmæɡnət/

magnet

English Noun Top 9,521
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Definition

A piece of material that attracts some metals by magnetism.

Etymology

From Middle English magnete, via Old French magnete, Latin magnēs, magnētem (“lodestone”), from Ancient Greek μαγνῆτις [λίθος] (magnêtis [líthos], “Magnesian [stone]”), either after the Lydian city Magnesia ad Sipylum (modern-day Manisa, Turkey), or after the Greek region of Μαγνησία (Magnēsía) (whence came the colonists who founded the city in Lydia). Related to manganese, magnesia and magnesium.

Example Sentences

  • "He always had a girl on his arm – he's a bit of a babe magnet."
  • "Iron and coal were the magnets that drew railways to this land of lovely valleys and silent mountains—for such it was a century-and-a-half ago, before man blackened the valleys with the smoke of his forges, scarred the green hills with his shafts and waste-heaps, and drove the salmon from the quiet Rhondda and the murmuring Taff."
  • "Again, dude? Man, you just a MAGNET for trouble!"
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