drone
drone [drone drones droned droning] noun, verb BrE [drəʊn] NAmE [droʊn] noun 1. usually singular a continuous low noise •the distant drone of traffic 2. usually singular a continuous low sound made by some musical instruments, for example the ↑bagpipes, over which other notes are played or sung; the part of the instrument that makes this noise 3. a male ↑bee that does not work compare ↑queen bee, ↑worker 4. a person who is lazy and gives nothing to society while others work •The medieval lord of the manor was what some today would call a drone. 5. an aircraft without a pilot, controlled from the ground Word Origin: Old English drān, drǣn ‘male bee’, from a West Germanic verb meaning ‘resound, boom’; related to Dutch dreunen ‘to drone’, German dröhnen ‘to roar’, and Swedish dröna ‘to drowse’. Example Bank: •the continuous drone of the engine Derived: ↑drone on verb intransitive to make a continuous low noise •A plane was droning in the distance. •a droning voice Verb forms: Word Origin: Old English drān, drǣn ‘male bee’, from a West Germanic verb meaning ‘resound, boom’; related to Dutch dreunen ‘to drone’, German dröhnen ‘to roar’, and Swedish dröna ‘to drowse’. Example Bank: •A small plane was droning in the distance. •I fell asleep to the sound of their voices droning through the warm afternoon.
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