Dynamos [noun]
Definition of Dynamos:
go-getter
Opposite/Antonyms of Dynamos:
-
Sentence/Example of Dynamos:
She isn’t the dramatic dynamo of the fashion industry’s imagination.
Edison was impressed, but he thought he could improve on the system, which used a steam-powered dynamo to produce an incredibly bright light—much too bright for household use, more akin to outdoor floodlights.
It was the face of a man who ran his mental dynamo at top speed in defiance of nature's laws against speeding.
Everybody but the dynamo-watch lay steeped in sleep; there was no sound.
He caught her frail body in his great grasp, and she vibrated like a bit of wire caught up by a dynamo.
I passed the Jefe myself on the City Hall steps, and heard him b-r-r-ring like a dynamo.
The motor and dynamo are mounted on a heavy wood base, which in turn is firmly bolted to a concrete foundation.
I judged it to be the dynamo or battery from which the projector was supplied with the light‑ray.
Kidder's medical battery used forty years ago or more, and still used and purchasable in its first form, was a dynamo.
The dynamo is the most prominent instance of actual mechanical utility in the field of electrical induction.