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Noun
On the funding side, science support is caught in a vise between Republican plans to reduce taxes and increase defense spending, while constraining the size of the federal debt.—Michael S. Lubell, Scientific American, 29 Jan. 2025 In such a vise, translators go to great lengths to sound different from other translators, resulting quite possibly in not sounding like the elusive Kafka at all.—Joy Williams, Harper's Magazine, 2 May 2024
Verb
McDonald’s left leg was vised between two plates of armored steel.—Ben Bolch, Los Angeles Times, 10 Nov. 2023 See all Example Sentences for vise
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English vys, vice screw, from Anglo-French vyz, from Latin vitis vine — more at withy
Verb (2)
French, past participle of viser to visa, from visa
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