Safe"ty (?), n.
(a) (Amer. Football) A safety touchdown.
(b) Short for Safety bicycle.
Safe"ty (?), n. [Cf. F. sauveté.]
1. The condition or state of being safe; freedom from danger or hazard; exemption from hurt, injury, or loss.
Up led by thee,
Into the heaven I
have presumed,
An earthly guest . . . With like safety guided down,
Return me to
my native element.
Milton.
2. Freedom from whatever exposes one to danger
or from liability to cause danger or harm; safeness; hence, the quality of making safe or secure, or of
giving confidence,
justifying trust, insuring against harm or loss, etc.
Would there were any safety in thy sex,
That I might
put a thousand sorrows off,
And credit thy repentance!
Beau. & Fl. 3. Preservation from escape; close custody.
Imprison him, . . .
Deliver him to safety; and return.
Shak. 4. (Football) Same as Safety touchdown, below.
Safety
arch (Arch.), a discharging arch. See under Discharge, v. t. -- Safety belt, a belt made of
some buoyant material, or which is capable of being inflated, so as to enable a person to float in water; a life
preserver. -- Safety buoy, a buoy to enable a person to float in water; a safety belt. -- Safety cage (Mach.),
a cage for an elevator or mine lift, having appliances to prevent it from dropping if the lifting rope should break. -- Safety lamp. (Mining) See under Lamp. -- Safety match, a match which
can be ignited only on a surface specially prepared for the purpose. -- Safety pin, a pin made in the form of a clasp, with a guard
covering its point so that
it will not
prick the wearer. -- Safety plug. See Fusible plug, under Fusible. --
Safety switch.
See Switch. --
Safety touchdown
(Football), the
act or result of a player's touching to the ground behind his own goal line
a ball which received its last impulse from a man on his own side; -- distinguished from touchback. See Touchdown. --
Safety tube
(Chem.), a tube to prevent explosion, or to control delivery of gases by an automatic valvular connection with the outer air; especially, a bent funnel
tube with bulbs for adding those reagents which produce unpleasant fumes or violent effervescence. -- Safety valve, a valve which
is held shut by a spring or weight and opens automatically to permit the escape of steam, or confined gas, water, etc., from a boiler, or other vessel, when the pressure becomes too great for safety; also, sometimes, a similar valve opening inward to admit air
to a vessel
in which the pressure is less than
that of the
atmosphere, to prevent collapse.