[
US
/ˈɡɪzˌmoʊ/
]
[ UK /ɡˈɪzməʊ/ ]
[ UK /ɡˈɪzməʊ/ ]
NOUN
-
something unspecified whose name is either forgotten or not known
she eased the ball-shaped doodad back into its socket
there may be some great new gizmo around the corner that you will want to use - a device or control that is very useful for a particular job
How To Use gizmo In A Sentence
- Oh, yes, they make those weird, two-wheel gizmos you have to stand on that you see Kevin James riding around in in his latest movie Paul Bart : Mall Cop - it's a comedy.
- You know how it is, when you're sitting out in the dark, 50 kilometres from the nearest place of inhabitation, and you turn on the light, even the tiniest little three LED gizmo.
- The company commissioned research into consumer attitudes to new technology which showed that we are all a bunch of lily-livered, scaredy-cats when it comes to trying new gizmos.
- The aerie overlooked a savannah of cubicles with shelves lined with gizmos, yurtlike conference rooms, and countless microkitchens equipped with goodie-stuffed fridges and high-end espresso machines. In the Plex
- We want our neighbors looking over the fence at our gizmos and gadgets. Christianity Today
- Convincing consumers that the gizmos are a good thing is turning out to be a tough sell. BusinessWeek.com -- Top News
- Your doc may get you to take some recordings of your breathing with a simple gizmo called a peak flow meter. The Sun
- Modern flashlights are like many other electronic gadgets, gizmos and whatchamacallits - they are high-tech.
- Whether it's what looks like junk in the shed or his pile of gizmos by the bed, all blokes have belongings they treasure. The Sun
- The centerpiece of his live act is a set of four gizmos he calls dub machines-Arduino-powered gear he can manipulate to produce sounds, loops, and rhythms. Wired Top Stories