Primary
''drive'' ▫ᴱᴺ|Definition|1st|20260305143651-00-⌔
drive - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
English
Verb
drive (third-person singular simple present drives, present participle driving, simple pastdrove or (archaic) drave or (dialectal) driv, past participledriven or (dialectal) druv or (dialectal) drove)
- To operate a vehicle:
- (transitive, ergative) To operate (a wheeled motorized vehicle).
- ✤ Synonym: ride
- ✤ Hyponym: test-drive
- ✤ The bridges weren’t strong enough to drive (campers) over.
- ✤ This SUV drives insanely smoothly—it’s like it knows what I want before I do.
- (intransitive) To travel by operating a wheeled motorized vehicle.
- ✤ Synonym: motorvate
- ✤ I drive to work every day.
- (transitive) To convey (a person, etc.) in a wheeled motorized vehicle.
- ✤ Synonym: take
- ✤ My cousin drove me to the airport.
- (transitive, slang, aviation) To operate (an aircraft); to pilot.
- ✤ Synonyms: fly, pilot
- ✤ * drive a 737*
- (transitive, intransitive) To direct a vehicle powered by a horse, ox or similar animal.
- ✤ There is a litter ready; lay him in’t
And drive towards Dover, friend, where thou shalt meet
Both welcome and protection.1- ✤ We drove back to the office with some concern on my part at the prospect of so large a case. Sunning himself on the board steps, I saw for the first time Mr. Farquhar Fenelon Cooke. He was dressed out in broad gaiters and bright tweeds, like an English tourist, and his face might have belonged to Dagon, idol of the Philistines.2
- To compel to move:
- (transitive) (especially of animals) To impel or urge onward by force; to push forward; to compel to move on.
- ✤ Synonyms: drove, goad, herd
- ✤ to drive twenty thousand head of cattle from Texas to the Kansas railheads; to drive sheep out of a field
- (transitive) (especially animals) To cause to flee out of.
- ✤ Synonyms: flush, flush out, scare up
- ✤ The hunting dog drove the birds out of the tall grass.
- ✤ We’ll drive the enemy from these lands once and for all.
- To cause to move by the application of physical force:
- (transitive) To provide an impetus for motion or other physical change, to move an object by means of the provision of force thereto.
- ✤ Synonyms: force, push
- ✤ You drive nails into wood with any hammer; it’s not as strenuous as driving a tunnel through the rock.
- ✤ Moving very quietly, I crept up the stairs, and at the top drove one drawing-pin into the lintel about a foot up, another at the same height into the baluster opposite […]3
- (transitive) To cause (a mechanism) to operate.
- ✤ Synonyms: move, operate
- ✤ The pistons drive the crankshaft.
- (intransitive, sports, cricket, tennis, baseball) To hit the ball with a drive.
- (transitive) To separate the lighter (feathers or down) from the heavier, by exposing them to a current of air.
- (transitive) To displace either physically or non-physically, through the application of force.
- ✤ One fire drives out one fire; one nail, one nail;
Rights by rights falter, strengths by strengths do fail.4- To compel to undergo a non-physical change:
- (transitive) To provide an impetus for a change in one’s situation or state of mind.
- ✤ My husband’s constant harping about the condition of the house threatens to drive me to distraction.
- (transitive) To motivate; to provide an incentive for.
- ✤ Synonyms: impel, incentivise, incentivize, push, urge; see also Thesaurus: incite
- ✤ What drives a person to run a marathon?
- (transitive) To compel, exert pressure, coerce (to do something).
- ✤ Synonyms: compel, force, oblige, push, require
- ✤ Their debts finally drove them to sell the business.
- ✤ He driuen to dismount, threatned, if I did not the like, to doo as much for my horse, as Fortune had done for his.5
- ✤ But darkness and the gloomy shade of death
Environ you, till mischief and despair
Drive you to break your necks or hang yourselves!6- (transitive) To cause to become.
- ✤ Synonyms: make, send, render
- ✤ This constant complaining is going to drive me insane.
- ✤ You are driving me crazy!
- ✤ And then to hear a dead man chatter7
- ✤ One morning I had been driven to the precarious refuge afforded by the steps of the inn, after rejecting offers from the Celebrity to join him in a variety of amusements. But even here I was not free from interruption, for he was seated on a horse-block below me, playing with a fox terrier.8
- (transitive) To motivate through the application or demonstration of force; to impel or urge onward in such a way.
- ✤ Synonyms: coerce, intimidate, threaten; see also Thesaurus: intimidate
- ✤ Frothing at the mouth and threatening expulsion, Coach relentlessly drove the team to more laps of the pitch.
- ✤ […] Demosthenes desired them first to put in at Pylos and not to proceed on their voyage until they had done what he wanted. They objected, but it so happened that a storm came on and drove them into Pylos.9
- (transitive) To urge, press, or bring to a point or state.
- ✤ The negotiations were driven to completion minutes before the final deadline.
- ✤ If you drive yourself so much, you’ll end up having a breakdown.
- ✤ And now we’re waiting for the very same people to establish GBR, drive through urgently needed fares reform, and come up with imaginative and effective train operating contracts…10
- ✤ Is enough to drive one mad.
- (intransitive) To move forcefully.
- ✤ Synonyms: onrush, plough
- ✤ […] Unequal match’d,
Pyrrhus at Priam drives, in rage strikes wide;11- ✤ Thus while the Pious Prince his Fate bewails,
Fierce Boreas drove against his flying Sails.
And rent the Sheets […]12- ✤ Time driveth onward fast,
And in a little while our lips are dumb.13- ✤ Charles, ill in body and mind, and glad to escape from his enemies under cover of the night and a driving tempest, was at length compelled to sign the treaty of Passau […]14
- ✤ It would seem they were regarding this new antagonist with astonishment. To their intelligence, it may be, the giant was even such another as themselves. The Thunder Child fired no gun, but simply drove full speed towards them. It was probably her not firing that enabled her to get so near the enemy as she did. They did not know what to make of her. One shell, and they would have sent her to the bottom forthwith with the Heat-Ray.15
- ✤ The impressive Frenchman drove forward with purpose down the right before cutting infield and darting in between Vassiriki Diaby and Koscielny.16
- (intransitive) To be moved or propelled forcefully (especially of a ship).
- (transitive) To carry or to keep in motion; to conduct; to prosecute.
- ✤ Synonyms: continue, carry on, pursue
- ✤ You know the Trade of Life can’t be driven without Partners; there is a reciprocal Dependance between the Greatest and the Least.19
- (transitive) To clear, by forcing away what is contained.
- ✤ Synonyms: empty, evacuate, void
- ✤ We come not with design of wastful Prey,
To drive the Country, force the Swains away:20- (mining) To dig horizontally; to cut a horizontal gallery or tunnel.
- ✤ Synonym: tunnel
- ✤ If the miners find no ore, they drive or cut a gallery from the pit a short distance at right angles to the direction of the lodes found21
- (American football) To put together a drive (n.): to string together offensive plays and advance the ball down the field.
- (obsolete) To distrain for rent.
- To be the dominant party in a sex act.
- ✤ Synonym: dominate
Noun
drive (countable and uncountable, plural drives)
- Planned, usually long-lasting, effort to achieve something; ability coupled with ambition, determination, and motivation.
- ✤ Synonyms: ambition, grit, push, verve, motivation, get-up-and-go, self-motivation
- ✤ Antonyms: inertia, lack of motivation, laziness, phlegm, sloth
- ✤ Crassus had wealth and wit, but Pompey had drive and Caesar as much again.
- ✤ As we contemplate the half-finished arterial roads and electrification plans of our own age, and the town-planning schemes that gather dust in the public libraries, we can admire the drive and action of the railway pioneers.22
- ✤ I confess that the sight of my minute man ahead, getting closer and closer, gives me a little more drive even when I think I am going as fast as I can.23
- ✤ Although British involvement in the slave trade prior to 1807 cannot be denied, or its effects diminished, it is also a fact that the Royal Navy was pretty much the only force in the world in the 19th century with the numbers, drive, willingness, firepower, and capability to curtail the global slave trade, and that, without these efforts, many more would no doubt have been taken to slave plantations and other such destinations during the 19th, and possibly even into the 20th, centuries, as it must be remembered that a great many European powers would only begrudgingly commit to ending the slave trade when the other option was continuous war with the British Empire.24
- ✤ I can make money from the comfort of my sofa/So much drive, now I gotta get a chauffeur25
- Violent or rapid motion; a rushing onward or away; (especially) a forced or hurried dispatch of business.
- ✤ The Murdstonian drive in business.26
- (by extension) An act of driving (prompting) animals forward.
- An act of driving game animals forward, to be captured or hunted.
- ✤ Are you all ready?’ he cried, and set off towards the dead ash where the drive would begin.27
- An act of driving livestock animals forward, to transport a herd.
- ✤ Synonyms: drove, drift
- (military) A sustained advance in the face of the enemy to take an objective.
- ✤ Synonyms: attack, push
- ✤ Napoleon’s drive on Moscow was as determined as it was disastrous.
- ✤ On the other hand, in Eritrea (once our Forces had recaptured Kassala on January 19) the drive was generally eastward towards the capital, Asmara, and the Red Sea port of Massaua.28
- Certain mechanisms in vehicles.
- A mechanism used to power or give motion to a vehicle or other machine or machine part.
- ✤ Synonyms: gear, engine, motor
- ✤ *steam drive, nuclear drive, chain drive, rear-wheel drive, all-wheel drive, front-wheel drive *
- ✤ Some old model trains have clockwork drives.
- ✤ A universal joint shaft takes the drive to the final drive unit mounted centrally on one of the axles.29
- ✤ Heat engine-electric hybrid vehicles: The hybrid vehicle on which most development work has been done to date is the one that couples a heat engine with an electric drive system. The objective remains the same as it was in 1900:30
- The location of the steering wheel used to control a vehicle.
- ✤ *left-hand drive, right-hand drive *
- (automotive) The gear into which one usually shifts an automatic transmission when one is driving a car or truck. (Denoted with symbol D on a shifter’s labeling.)
- ✤ Normally you should be in drive, although you can select a lower gear such as 2 or 1 for certain conditions, such as prolonged downhill stretches.
- An act of piloting or riding within a vehicle (now generally in a motor vehicle).
- ✤ The drive this morning was awful due to snow and ice.
- A trip made in a vehicle (now generally in a motor vehicle).
- ✤ Synonyms: ride, spin, trip
- ✤ It was a long drive to Santa Fe.
- ✤ We merely waited to rouse good Mrs. Vesey from the place which she still occupied at the deserted luncheon-table, before we entered the open carriage for our promised drive.31
- The act of driving a car with no destination in mind, generally to see the scenery, be alone with one’s thoughts or to spend time with a partner.
- ✤ We like to go for a drive on Sunday afternoons.
- Certain surfaces for driving on.
- (dated) A place suitable or agreeable for driving; a road prepared for driving.
- A driveway.
- ✤ Synonyms: approach, driveway
- ✤ The mansion had a long, tree-lined drive.
- ✤ We expressed our readiness, and in ten minutes were in the station wagon, rolling rapidly down the long drive, for it was then after nine. We passed on the way the van of the guests from Asquith.32
- ✤ Halfway from Hellingly Station, the railway enters the well-kept hospital grounds, and runs parallel with a tree-lined drive about half a mile long.33
- ✤ I listen for your footsteps coming up the drive/Listen for your footsteps, but they don’t arrive34
- (generally, capitalized) A type of public roadway.
- ✤ Synonyms: avenue, boulevard, road, street
- ✤ Beverly Hills’ most famous street is Rodeo Drive.
- (psychology) Desire or interest.
- ✤ Synonyms: desire, impetus, impulse, urge
- ✤ On the latter show, former Playboy Playmate Carrie Westcott said she’d never met a man who could match her sexual drive.35
- (computer hardware) A device for reading and writing data.
- (computer hardware) An apparatus for reading and writing data to or from a mass storage device such as a disk.
- ✤ Synonym: disk drive
- ✤ Hyponym: floppy drive
- (computer hardware) A mass storage device in which the mechanism for reading and writing data is integrated with the mechanism for storing data.
- ✤ Hyponyms: hard drive, flash drive
- The state of being under pressure, stressed and hurried.
- ✤ I suffered under the intense drive of my new job.
- (golf) A stroke made with a driver.
- (baseball, tennis) A ball struck in a flat trajectory.
- ✤ *a long drive *
- (cricket) A type of shot played by swinging the bat in a vertical arc, through the line of the ball, and hitting it along the ground, normally between cover and midwicket.
- (soccer) A straight level shot or pass.
- ✤ And after Rodallega missed two early opportunities, the first a header, the second a low drive easily held by Lukasz Fabianski, it was N’Zogbia who created the opening goal.36
- (American football) An offensive possession, generally one consisting of several plays and/or first downs, often leading to a scoring opportunity.
- (philanthropy) A charity event such as a fundraiser, bake sale, or toy drive.
- ✤ *a fund-raising drive *
- ✤ *a whist drive *
- ✤ *a beetle drive *
- (retail) A campaign aimed at selling or promoting (something).
- ✤ *vaccination drive *
- (typography) An impression or matrix formed by a punch drift.
- A collection of objects that are driven.
- A mass of logs to be floated down a river or the act of moving them thusly.
- (UK, especially Bristol and Wales, slang) Friendly term of address for a bus driver.
- ✤ Yeah, thanks, drive!
You boyz all goin’shoppin’?
We are, drive, says Chip.37- ✤ The coaches dropped us where we had begun, outside the chapel; each child in turn piping up, ‘Thank you, drive!’ as we disembarked.38
- ✤ Soon every stop on every route was once again punctuated by rounds of ‘Cheers drive! Cheers drive! Cheers drive!’ And with this little nicety reinstated, all was relatively well in Bristol town.39
- ✤ ‘Cheers, Drive!’ said Dylan as they climbed off the bus.40
Etymology
From Middle English driven, from Old English drīfan (“to drive, force, move”), from Proto-West Germanic ﹡drīban, from Proto-Germanic ﹡drībaną (“to drive”), from Proto-Indo-European ﹡dʰreybʰ- (“to drive, push”).
Pronunciation
Printed 2026-06-28.
(echo:: @ ⌗)
Link to original Footnotes
c. 1603–1606, William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of King Lear”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act II, scene vi]: ↩
1897 December (indicated as 1898), Winston Churchill, chapter II, in The Celebrity: An Episode, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company; London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., →OCLC: ↩
1923, Ernest Bramah [pseudonym; Ernest Brammah Smith], “”, in The Eyes of Max Carrados, London: Grant Richards, →OCLC: ↩
c. 1608–1609 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedy of Coriolanus”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act IV, scene vii]: ↩
c. 1580 (date written), Philippe Sidnei [i.e., Philip Sidney], “”, in [Fulke Greville; Matthew Gwinne; John Florio], editors, The Countesse of Pembrokes Arcadia [The New Arcadia], London: […] [John Windet] for William Ponsonbie, published 1590, →OCLC: ↩
1591 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The First Part of Henry the Sixt”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act V, scene iv]: ↩
1855, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Maud, XXV, 1. in Maud, and Other Poems, London: Edward Moxon, p. 90, ↩
1897 December (indicated as 1898), Winston Churchill, chapter IV, in The Celebrity: An Episode, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company; London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., →OCLC: ↩
1881, “Thucydides”, in Benjamin Jowett, transl., History of the Peloponnesian War , Oxford: Clarendon, Volume I, Book 4, p. 247: ↩
2022 January 12, Nigel Harris, “Comment: Unhappy start to 2022”, in RAIL, number 948, page 3: ↩
c. 1599–1602 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmarke”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act II, scene ii]: ↩
1697, Virgil, “The First Book of the Æneis”, in John Dryden, transl., The Works of Virgil: Containing His Pastorals, Georgics, and Æneis. […], London: […] Jacob Tonson, […], →OCLC, lines 146-148: ↩
1833, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, “The Lotos-Eaters”, in Poems , London: Edward Moxon, page 113: ↩
1855, William H[ickling] Prescott, chapter 1, in History of the Reign of Philip the Second, King of Spain, volume I, Boston, Mass.: Phillips, Sampson, and Company, →OCLC, book I, page 7: ↩
1898, H.G. Wells, “The “Thunder Child.””, in The War of the Worlds , Leipzig: Bernhard Tauchnitz, retrieved 24 November 2022, page 175: ↩
2010 December 29, Mark Vesty, “Wigan 2-2 Arsenal”, in BBC: ↩
c. 1607–1608 (date written), William Shakespeare, [George Wilkins?], The Late, and Much Admired Play, Called Pericles, Prince of Tyre. […], London: […] [William White and Thomas Creede] for Henry Gosson, […], published 1609, →OCLC, [Act III, prologue]: ↩
1743, Robert Drury, The Pleasant, and Surprizing Adventures of Mr. Robert Drury, during his Fifteen Years Captivity on the Island of Madagascar , London, page 12: ↩
1694, Jeremy Collier, “Of General Kindness”, in Miscellanies in Five Essays , London: Sam. Keeble & Jo. Hindmarsh, page 69: ↩
1697, Virgil, “The First Book of the Æneis”, in John Dryden, transl., The Works of Virgil: Containing His Pastorals, Georgics, and Æneis. […], London: […] Jacob Tonson, […], →OCLC, lines 744-745: ↩
1852-1866, Charles Tomlinson, Cyclopaedia of Useful Arts and Manufactures ↩
1951 December, Michael Robbins, “John Francis’s “History of the English Railway””, in Railway Magazine, page 800: ↩
1986, Fred Matheny, Solo Cycling: How to Train and Race Bicycle Time Trials, page 136: ↩
2018 December 1, Drachinifel, 11:37 from the start, in Anti-Slavery Patrols - The West Africa Squadron , archived from the original on 29 November 2024: ↩
2024, “Hot One”, in King of the Mischievous South Vol. 2, performed by Denzel Curry, Note the word play involving the senses of operating a vehicle: ↩
1881, Matthew Arnold, The Incompatibles: ↩
1955, Robin Jenkins, The Cone-Gatherers, Canongate, published 2012, page 79: ↩
1941 August, Charles E. Lee, “Railways of Italian East Africa—I”, in Railway Magazine, page 340: ↩
1958 April, “Diesel Railbus for British Railways”, in Railway Magazine, page 275: ↩
2001, Michael Hereward Westbrook, The Electric Car, IET, →ISBN, page 146: ↩
1859, Wilkie Collins, The Woman in White : ↩
1897 December (indicated as 1898), Winston Churchill, chapter V, in The Celebrity: An Episode, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company; London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., →OCLC: ↩
1957 December, H. R. Stones, “The Hellingly Hospital Railway”, in Railway Magazine, page 871: ↩
1968, Ringo Starr, “Don’t Pass Me By”, performed by The Beatles: ↩
1995 March 2, John Carman, “Believe It, You Saw It in Sweeps”, SFGate [9] ↩
2010 December 29, Mark Vesty, “Wigan 2-2 Arsenal”, in BBC: ↩
2017 March 21, Leonora Brito, Dat’s Love and Other Stories, Parthian Books, →ISBN: ↩
2017 July 1, Huw Lewis, To Hear the Skylark’s Song, Parthian Books, →ISBN: ↩
2018 June 28, Wilf Merttens, Bristol Urban Legends: The Hotwells Crocodile and Other Stories, The History Press, →ISBN: ↩
2019 May 30, Ed Clarke, The Secret Dragon, Penguin UK, →ISBN: ↩
Secondary
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