slipstream

UK /ˈslɪp.stɹiːm/ US /ˈslɪp.stɹiːm/
noun 5verb 2

Definitions

noun

1

The low-pressure zone immediately following a rapidly moving object, caused by turbulence.

Monza was the seventh race in a row at which Leclerc had out-qualified Vettel. There were extenuating circumstances this time - Vettel did not have a slipstream on his first lap and the farcical end to qualifying prevented him doing another - but a clear pattern is emerging.

2

A generated advantage which makes forward movement easier.

The Republicans, who in fact quintessentially represent what I understand to be private and special interests of a narrow economic kind, have nevertheless managed, flying in the slipstream of Ronald Reagan's rhetoric, to look like the true guardians of the nation's public interest.

3

The relative wind experienced as a result of movement through air.

4

The airflow over a propeller-driven aircraft generated by the motion of its propeller(s).

5

A genre of fantastic or non-realistic fiction that crosses conventional genre boundaries.

Slipstream is not simply a mixture of fantasy and realism, but something which lies between or even beyond the two.

verb

1

To take advantage of the suction produced by a slipstream by travelling immediately behind the slipstream generator.

Although dangerous, over-the-road truck drivers sometimes slipstream with each other to save fuel.

2

To incorporate additional software (such as patches) into an existing installer.

You do this by slipstreaming the updates into the distribution folder.

A better solution is to create a bootable Windows XP installation CD slipstreamed with the current service pack...

Your note

not saved
0 chars