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—wearer, n.v.t.1. to carry or have on the body or about the person as a covering, equipment, ornament, or the like: to wear a coat; to wear a saber; to wear a disguise.2. to have or use on the person habitually: to wear a wig.3. to bear or have in one's aspect or appearance: to wear a smile; to wear an air of triumph.4. to cause (garments, linens, etc.) to deteriorate or change by wear: Hard use has worn these gloves.5. to impair, deteriorate, or consume gradually by use or any continued process: Long illness had worn the bloom from her cheeks.6. to waste or diminish gradually by rubbing, scraping, washing, etc.: The waves have worn these rocks.8. to bring about or cause a specified condition in (a person or thing) by use, deterioration, or gradual change: to wear clothes to rags; to wear a person to a shadow.9. to weary; fatigue; exhaust: Toil and care soon wear the spirit.10. to pass (time) gradually or tediously (usually fol. by away or out): We wore the afternoon away in arguing.11. Naut. to bring (a vessel) on another tack by turning until the wind is on the stern.12. Brit. Dial. to gather and herd (sheep or cattle) to a pen or pasture.v.i.13. to undergo gradual impairment, diminution, reduction, etc., from wear, use, attrition, or other causes (often fol. by away, down, out, or off).14. to retain shape, color, usefulness, value, etc., under wear, use, or any continued strain: a strong material that will wear; colors that wear well.15. (of time) to pass, esp. slowly or tediously (often fol. by on or away): As the day wore on, we had less and less to talk about.16. to have the quality of being easy or difficult to tolerate, esp. after a relatively long association: It's hard to get to know him, but he wears well.17. Naut. (of a vessel) to come round on another tack by turning away from the wind.18. Obs. to be commonly worn; to be in fashion.19. wear down,a. to reduce or impair by long wearing: to wear down the heels of one's shoes.b. to weary; tire: His constant talking wears me down.c. to prevail by persistence; overcome: to wear down the opposition.20. wear off, to diminish slowly or gradually or to diminish in effect; disappear: The drug began to wear off.21. wear out,a. to make or become unfit or useless through hard or extended use: to wear out clothes.b. to expend, consume, or remove, esp. slowly or gradually.c. to exhaust, as by continued strain; weary: This endless bickering is wearing me out.22. wear thin,a. to diminish; weaken: My patience is wearing thin.b. to become less appealing, interesting, tolerable, etc.: childish antics that soon wore thin.n.23. the act of wearing; use, as of a garment: articles for winter wear; I've had a lot of wear out of this coat.24. the state of being worn, as on the person.25. clothing or other articles for wearing, esp. when fashionable or appropriate for a particular function (often used in combination): travel wear; sportswear.26. gradual impairment, wasting, diminution, etc., as from use: The carpet shows wear.27. the quality of resisting deterioration with use; durability.[bef. 900; (v.) ME weren to have (clothes) on the body, waste, damage, suffer waste or damage, OE werian; c. ON verja, Goth wasjan to clothe; (n.) late ME were act of carrying on the body, deriv. of the v.; akin to L vestis clothing (see VEST)]Syn. 21c. tire, fatigue, drain.
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▪ physicsthe removal of material from a solid surface as a result of mechanical action exerted by another solid. Wear chiefly occurs as a progressive loss of material resulting from the mechanical interaction of two sliding surfaces under load. Wear is such a universal phenomenon that rarely do two solid bodies slide over each other or even touch each other without a measurable material transfer or material loss. Thus, coins become worn as a result of continued contact with fabrics and human fingers; pencils become worn after sliding over paper; and rails become worn as a result of the continued rolling of train wheels over them. Only living things (such as bone joints) are in some sense immune to the permanent damage caused by wear, since they have the property of regrowth and healing.The most common type, adhesive wear, arises from the strong adhesive forces that are generated at the interface of two solid materials. When solid surfaces are pressed together, intimate contact is made over a number of small patches or junctions. During sliding, these junctions continue to be made and broken, and, if a junction does not break along the original interface, a wear particle is formed. These particles eventually break away. Adhesive wear is undesirable for two reasons: first, the loss of material will eventually lead to a deterioration in the performance of the mechanism; and second, the formation of large wear particles in closely fitted sliding members may cause the mechanism to seize at an early stage in its productive life. Adhesive wear is many times greater for unlubricated than for effectively lubricated metal surfaces.Abrasive wear occurs when a hard, rough surface slides over a softer one, producing grooves on the latter. It also can be caused by loose, abrasive particles rolling between two soft sliding surfaces or by particles embedded in one of the opposing surfaces. Abrasive fragments borne by a stream of liquid or gas may wear down a surface if they strike the surface at high speeds. Since abrasive wear takes place when the abrading material is rough and harder than the surface to be abraded, it can be prevented either by eliminating the hard, rough constituent or by making the surface to be protected harder still.Corrosive wear occurs whenever a gas or liquid chemically attacks a surface left exposed by the sliding process. Normally, when a surface corrodes, the products of corrosion (such as patina) tend to stay on the surface, thus slowing down further corrosion. But, if continuous sliding takes place, the sliding action removes the surface deposits that would otherwise protect against further corrosion, which thus takes place more rapidly. A surface that has experienced corrosive wear generally has a matte, relatively smooth appearance.Surface- fatigue wear is produced by repeated high stress attendant on a rolling motion, such as that of metal wheels on tracks or a ball bearing rolling in a machine. The stress causes subsurface cracks to form in either the moving or the stationary component. As these cracks grow, large particles separate from the surface and pitting ensues. Surface-fatigue wear is the most common form of wear affecting rolling elements such as bearings or gears. For sliding surfaces, adhesive wear usually proceeds sufficiently rapidly that there is no time for surface-fatigue wear to occur.Though the wear process is generally thought of as harmful, and in most practical situations is so, it has some practical uses as well. For example, many methods of producing a surface on a manufactured object depend on abrasive wear, among them filing, sanding, lapping, and polishing. Many writing instruments, principally the pencil, crayon, and chalk, depend for their effect on adhesive wear. Another use is seen in the wear of the incisor teeth of rodents. These teeth have a hard enamel covering along the outer curved surface but only soft dentine on the inner surface. Hence, abrasive and adhesive wear, which occurs more rapidly on the softer side, acts to maintain a sharp cutting edge on the teeth.* * *
Universalium. 2010.