perforator, n.

Etymology:  < perforate v. + -or suffix. Compare post-classical Latin perforator tool for boring holes (late 13th cent. in a British source), piercer (1404, 1526 in British sources), Old Occitan perforador (14th cent.).

 1. 

 a. Surg. An instrument for piercing the skull of a (dead) fetus in the birth canal in order to facilitate delivery. Also: a trephine.

1739    S. Sharp Treat. Surg. xiii. 61   Withdrawing the Perforator, leave the Waters to empty by the Canula.

1790    Med. Communications 2 454   We are under the necessity of using the perforator and crotchet.

1822    J. W. Good Study Med. IV. 210   The forceps or what, in the probability of the child’s being still alive is ten times worse, the perforator must be called into action.

1871    A. Meadows Man. Midwifery (ed. 2) 242   Rather than see the mother die undelivered, I used the perforator and extracted.

1904    Brit. Med. Jrnl. 10 Sept. 606   Douglas’s septum perforator and curved septum knife.

1985    M. F. Myles Textbk. Midwives (ed. 10) xxxv. 659   The point of the perforator‥is inserted. 

 b. Archaeol. A pointed (usually stone) tool for making holes.

1854    J. W. Taylor Hist. Ohio 1650–1787 14   Within these enclosures have been found stone axes, pipes, perforators, bone fish hooks, [etc.].

1901    Amer. Anthropologist 3 517   The arrowpoint illustrated belongs to the class usually called perforators, or drills.

1949    Amer. Antiq. 14 97/1   The eastern specimens do not include what Greenman has called perforators.

1998    Jrnl. Field Archaeol. 25 337/2   It [sc. a midden] contained some elite materials (including a broken jade perforator, a jaguar tooth, and a shell pendant). 

 c. A machine for making perforations or holes in paper, sheets of stamps, etc.

1855    Littell’s Living Age 6 Jan. 39/1   The printed sheets reach Somerset House, where Mr. Hill’s invincible perforators stab them right and left.

1876    W. H. Preece & J. Sivewright Telegraphy §119   The [Wheatstone] apparatus consists of three parts: the perforator, which prepares the message by punching holes in a paper ribbon; the transmitter‥and the receiver.

1911    Encycl. Brit. XXVI. 521/2   The Creed system‥provides a keyboard perforator which punches Morse letters or figures on a paper strip by depressing typewriter keys.

1948    Proc. Symp. Large-scale Digital Calculating Machinery 1947 (U.S. Navy Dept. & Harvard Univ.) 251   The electronic commutator controls the transfer from the registers into the teletype perforator, which in turn prepares the final tape.

1971    R. Brewer Approach to Print x. 118 (caption)    Diagram of a computer typesetting system. Here the copy is taken from the ‘input perforator’ stage.

1993    Gibbons Stamp Monthly Jan. 93 35/2   The comb perforator, travelling vertically, has jumped an entire row of stamps, resulting in two of the stamps being imperforate at base. 

 d. A machine for tunnelling through rock; a machine for drilling holes in rock in which blasting charges are placed. Now rare.

1861    Sci. Amer. 21 Sept. 180/1   The perforators operate in the most satisfactory manner.

1891    R. Routledge Discov. & Inventions 19th Cent. (ed. 8) 267   On the 25th December, 1870, perforator No. 45 bored a hole from Italy into France, by piercing the wall of rock.

1910    Chambers’s Jrnl. Oct. 688/1   This perforator is suspended with the base uppermost, elevated by a machine similar to the ordinary pile-driver, and, when it reaches the predetermined height, automatically released. 

 2. Anat. A perforating artery, vein, muscle, or nerve. Freq. attrib.

1824    Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 114 239   Tendons go off from each side of the perforator muscles.

1967    Acta Chirurgica Scandinavica 133 277 (title)    Variations in operative technique‥in subfascial ligation of incompetent ankle perforator veins.

2003    Jrnl. Reconstructive Microsurg. 19 443   A degree of communication was found between the superficial sural artery‥and the muscle perforators from the gastrocnemius muscle.

†3. Entomol. Any of various organs used by certain insects to penetrate a surface or bore a hole; spec. an ovipositor. Obs. rare.

1828    J. Stark Elements Nat. Hist. II. 335   Tenthredo.‥ Perforator not projecting beyond the anus.

1828    J. Stark Elements Nat. Hist. II. 336   Some have the last half segment of the abdomen prolonged into a point, with a projecting perforator of three filaments.

A middle-northern March, now as always—
gusts from the south broken against cold winds—
but from under, as if a slow hand lifted a tide,
it moves—not into April—into a second March,
the old skin of wind-clear scales dropping
upon the mould: this is the shadow projects the tree
upward causing the sun to shine in his sphere.

From “A Celebration,” William Carlos Williams

March

Winter is long in this climate
and spring—a matter of a few days
only,—a flower or two picked
from mud or from among wet leaves
or at best against treacherous
bitterness of wind, and sky shining
teasingly, then closing in black
and sudden, with fierce jaws.

– From “March,” William Carlos Williams