What is the name meaning of WRENCH. Phrases containing WRENCH
See name meanings and uses of WRENCH!WRENCH
WRENCH
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English wrench ‘wile’, ‘trick’, ‘artifice’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : perhaps a variant of Wrench (see Rench).Probably also an Americanized spelling of German Renegar.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : perhaps a variant spelling of Wrench, a nickname from Middle English wrench ‘trick’, ‘artifice’.Probably an altered spelling of German Rensch or Rentsch.
WRENCH
WRENCH
Boy/Male
British, English
God; Abbreviation of Deadulus
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Maa Ganga
Girl/Female
Hindu
Cuckoo bird sings Kuhu
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Servant of the Patient (Allah)
Girl/Female
Indian
Golden creeper, Golden wine
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sanskrit, Telugu
Twenty-second Nashaktra
Boy/Male
Celtic Gaelic Scottish
Seaman.
Boy/Male
Muslim
A great worshiper of Allah
Boy/Male
Muslim
Another name of God, Pile, Treasury
Boy/Male
Biblical
Right hand; numbering; preparing.
WRENCH
WRENCH
WRENCH
WRENCH
WRENCH
n.
A short bar used by thieves to wrench doors open.
n.
To strain; to sprain; hence, to distort; to pervert.
n.
The act of wresting; a wrench; a violent twist; hence, distortion; perversion.
v. t.
The system made up of a force and a couple of forces in a plane perpendicular to that force. Any number of forces acting at any points upon a rigid body may be compounded so as to be equivalent to a wrench.
v. t.
An instrument, often a simple bar or lever with jaws or an angular orifice either at the end or between the ends, for exerting a twisting strain, as in turning bolts, nuts, screw taps, etc.; a screw key. Many wrenches have adjustable jaws for grasping nuts, etc., of different sizes.
v. t.
To wrest from an unwilling person by physical force, menace, duress, torture, or any undue or illegal exercise of power or ingenuity; to wrench away (from); to tear away; to wring (from); to exact; as, to extort contributions from the vanquished; to extort confessions of guilt; to extort a promise; to extort payment of a debt.
v. t.
A violent twist, or a pull with twisting.
v. t.
To wrench; to tear; to sprain; to injure by violent straining or contortion.
n.
To pull with a twist; to wrest, twist, or force by violence.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Wrench
n.
An iron instrument having a jaw to fit a nut or the head of a bolt, and used as a lever to turn it with; a wrench; specifically, a wrench for unscrewing or tightening the couplings of hose.
a.
Subjected to great or excessive tension; wrenched; weakened; as, strained relations between old friends.
imp. & p. p.
of Wrench
n.
A handle or wrench forming a holder for the dies for cutting screws; a diestock.
v. t.
Trick; deceit; fraud; stratagem.
n.
The act of turning or twisting, or the state of being twisted; the twisting or wrenching of a body by the exertion of a lateral force tending to turn one end or part of it about a longitudinal axis, while the other is held fast or turned in the opposite direction.
v. t.
To weaken, as a joint, ligament, or muscle, by sudden and excessive exertion, as by wrenching; to overstrain, or stretch injuriously, but without luxation; as, to sprain one's ankle.
n.
A large wrench.
v. t.
Means; contrivance.
v. t.
A sprain; an injury by twisting, as in a joint.