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English
Etymology
From buzz + saw.
Noun
buzzsaw (plural buzzsaws)
- A circular saw.
2008 May 30, Andrew Martin, “Food Report Criticizes Biofuel Policies”, in New York Times:Agriculture Secretary Edward T. Schafer is preparing to walk into a buzzsaw of criticism over American biofuels policy when he meets with world leaders to discuss the global food crisis next week.
- (slang) Someone or something that makes a loud, harsh, grinding or rasping noise, like that of a circular saw.
1979, Michael Bishop, Catacomb Years, page 112:No danger of these buzzsaws waking up, it was enough to make you wish for impaired hearing.
2006, Maximum Rocknroll - Issue 277, page 30:Anyway, buzzsaw hardcore from both bands with nice 'n' trebly production, and each have some Japanese influences in there.
2011, Phillip A. Elwood, Giant in the Hills, page 11:Nasal buzzsaws shook the sides of the tent as finally, they were all out for night.
2014, Wendy Ruderman, Barbara Laker, Busted:In the darkness, Benny listened to the sounds of the street: a far-off police siren, a dog's growl, a hip-hop pulse blaring from a car stereo, the buzzsaw whine of the El.
- (slang) The MG 42 general-purpose machine gun.
2012, Benjamin Blackie, Sea Dogs, page 56:Golden tracers from the jaggering MG42 buzzsaw lit up the air like glitter, and from both directions there were bee-hive-volumes of whizzes and snaps as bullets passed through the air, in some cases only feet from them.
2018, Mark Felton, Ghost Riders:Suddenly, machine-gun rounds tore over their heads, stitching a neat row of holes in the wall above them, the weapon's unmistakable ripping report identifying it as a 'buzz saw', as the GIs had nicknamed the German MG42 because of its stupendous rate of fire.
2020, David Mack, The Shadow Commission:Cade braced its stock against his shoulder, sighted the moving shadows in the woods, and let the buzz saw chew into them.
2020, Daniel Altman, Fawn Zwickel, From Omaha Beach to Nuremberg: A Memoir of World War II, page 13:On Omaha Beach, the Panzer Army locked up the beachhead with eight concrete bunkers, with their buzzsaw MG-42 machine guns that fired 1,500 rounds per minute, aimed from 35 pillboxes with automatic artillery pieces of different sizes.
- (slang) A violently destructive attack.
1983, TVI Journal - Volume 4, page 15:The changes ran into a buzzsaw of Congressional criticism.
1987, Paul Morris Hirsch, Pack Your Own Parachute, page 88:Downsizings attack managers like an emotional buzzsaw.
1994, Jimmy Johnson, Ed Hinton, Turning the Thing Around: My Life in Football, page 24:Landry's martyrdom was automatic and mostly unavoidable -- although Jerry, bless his heart, went into his initial press conference at Valley Ranch and walked right into his second media buzzsaw.
1995, Henry W. Thomas, Walter Johnson: Baseball's Big Train, page 322:But aware of it or not, Johnson was heading into a buzzsaw.
1997, Robert Peterson, Joni Peterson, J. Allen Kirsch, Rites of Passage: Odyssey of a Grunt, page 51:We knew that we were headed into a buzzsaw and some of us might not come back, a thought so absurd and so real that it was overwhelming.
2013, Stephen Hunter, Hot Springs:The old wood and plasterboard vaporized under the buzzsaw of .30 caliber bullets.
- One who attacks violently and/or mindlessly.
1935, Ivor Armstrong Richards, Basic in Teaching: East and West, page 8:So he keeps away from the intellectual buzzsaws; and, as both philology and philosophy grow ever more and more technical, the gap between them, if anything, widens.
1973, Kansas Fish and Game - Volumes 30-33, page 2:Apparently the jay was unaware that the hawk no longer had its hold because it became a buzzsaw of blue fury, slashing the hawk several more times.
1992, The Pet Bird Report - Volumes 2-4, page 10:Similarly , if mom or dad choose to do something other than play with the little feathered buzzsaws, as occasionally we humans do , the birds would have no choice but to "play" with whatever was handy: chairs, lamps, cabinets, pillows, or original Picasso... you get the idea.
2010, Gary Wolfram, Cars and Trucks, Markets and Governments, page 31:But the minute he arrived, he ran into a buzzsaw named Lee Iacocca.
2015, Jamie Mason, Kezzie of Babylon:Perhaps it's habit, an ingrained autonomous component to feeding, a lingering artifact from when they were still alive, thinking creatures instead of walking buzzsaws.
Derived terms
Verb
buzzsaw (third-person singular simple present buzzsaws, present participle buzzsawing, simple past and past participle buzzsawed)
- (transitive) To cut with a circular saw.
- (intransitive, colloquial) To spin rapidly like the blades of a circular saw.
1990, Kyle Maning, Blood Storm, page 53:The 7.62 tumblers would buzzsaw through the flimsy protection offered by the float.
- (transitive, intransitive, colloquial) To produce a loud, harsh noise like that of a circular saw.
1981, Michael Hogan, The Broken Face of Summer: Poems:When the sun comes early through eastern windows and a single horsefly buzzsaws the air it is then I rise from bed my dreams of amputation, of teeth lost, cloaked in the amnesia of another day overwhelmed with trivia.
2014, Cody Toye, Evolution:A loud screeching sound buzzsaws the eerie silence of the day.