English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Coined by American science fiction authors E. E. Smith and Lee Hawkins Garby in their 1928 novel The Skylark of Space, first serialized in Amazing Stories.
Noun
[edit]pressure suit (plural pressure suits)
- (aviation, astronautics) A sealed, full-body garment, usually with an attachable helmet, which maintains air pressure or mechanical pressure around the body of an astronaut or aviator to compensate for the low density of the air at high altitudes.
- 1928 September, E. E. Smith, Lee Hawkins Garby, βThe Skylark of Spaceβ, in Amazing Stories, volume 3, number 6, page 539:
- Have you fur pressure-suits?
- 1964 November 19, Walter Sullivan, βApes Surviving in Vacuum Tests: Research Hints Astronauts Have Chance in Accidentsβ, in New York Times, retrieved 3 May 2014:
- The chances for survival would be greatly increased if one member of the crew in a punctured ship was wearing a pressure suit.
- 2002 July 29, Nigel Fountain, βObituary: John Cunningham, Wartime night-fighter hero and post-war Comet airliner test pilotβ, in The Guardian, UK, retrieved 3 May 2014:
- In 1947 he had taken a de Havilland Vampire jet fighter to a then world record height of 59,460 feet, without a pressure suit,
- 2011 April 12, Jeffrey Kluger, βGagarin's Golden Anniversaryβ, in Time, retrieved 3 May 2014:
- Alan Shepard, the first American in space, famously relieved himself inside his silver pressure suit while waiting out the countdown in his tiny Mercury capsule.
Hypernyms
[edit]Hyponyms
[edit]Coordinate terms
[edit]- (suit to protect wearer from the environment): diving suit, environmental suit
- (aviator garment): flight suit
Translations
[edit]full-body garment, which maintains pressure
|
References
[edit]- βpressure suitβ, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- Jeff Prucher, editor (2007), βpressure suitβ, in Brave New Words: The Oxford Dictionary of Science Fiction, Oxford, Oxfordshire; New York, N.Y.: Oxford University Press, βISBN, pages 155β156.
- Jesse Sheidlower, editor (2001β2026), βpressure-suit n.β, in Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction.
