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choking
DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
Entry from the DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
This entry may contain outdated or offensive information, terms, and examples.
1n. — Hist.
the practice of temporarily choking off with a rope the breath of a horse floundering in water so that it will not take water into the lungs and drown.
See: choke-rope
Quotations
<i>a</i>1820
In this dilemma the driver . . . slipped a noose of rope round the drowning animal's neck, upon which we pulled till he seemed to be nearly strangled: and this operation is called in the country, very properly, "choking." Whether it was that he floated by means of the air thus forcibly retained in his lungs, as the driver asserted, or whether our united efforts caused him to rise, I cannot say; but so he did; and we had not continued to tug long, before out he slipped on his side, and after a few kicks and struggles, stood frightened and shivering once more on his feet.
2n. — Lumbering
the process of handling logs by means of a choker.
See: choker
Quotations
1948
Choking and Skidding is wholly mechanized by means of Arches or Sulky's pulled by Caterpillars, mostly on level ground.