Parachute /(păr"ȧ*sho͡ot [or] păr"ȧ*shṳt)/
Par·a·chute
Parachute
n.
- A device made of a piece of cloth, usually silk, attached to multiple chords fastened to a harness; when attached to a person or object falling through the air, it opens from a folded configuration into an umbrella-shaped form, thus slowing the rate of descent so that a safe descent and landing may be made through the air from an airplane, balloon, or other high point. It is commonly used for descending to the ground from a flying airplane, as for military operations (as of airborne troops) or in an emergency, or for sport. In the case of use as a sport, the descent from an airplane by parachute is called sky diving. Some older versions of parachute were more rigid, and were shaped somewhat in the form of an umbrella.
- A web or fold of skin which extends between the legs of certain mammals, as the flying squirrels, colugo, and phalangister. (Zool.)
parachute
v. i.
- TO descend to th ground from an airplane or other high place using a parachute; as, when the plane stalled, he parachuted safely to the ground.
Phrases & Compounds
- golden parachute
- a generous set of financial benefits, including severance pay, provided by contract to a high-level corporate employee in the event s/he is dismissed or his/her job is lost in a corporate takeover or merger; also, the contract providing for such benefits.
- drogue parachute
- a small parachute that is first released and opened in order to more reliably deploy a larger parachute. Also called drogue.