metal-detect

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English

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Etymology

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Back-formation from metal detector.

Verb

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metal-detect (third-person singular simple present metal-detects, present participle metal-detecting, simple past and past participle metal-detected)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) To use a metal detector to find metal objects on the surface or buried underground.
    • 2013 August 2, Taft Kiser, “Open Season on History”, in The New York Times[1]:
      Flowerdew has three known cemeteries, containing Woodland Indians, 1620s colonists and enslaved individuals from about 1760. All three are in the area metal-detected last March. [] At the Little Bighorn Battlefield, in Montana, volunteers have used their metal-detecting machines to pinpoint artifacts, whose position rewrote the story of Custer’s Last Stand.
  2. (transitive) To make (someone) pass through a metal detector to detect concealed metal objects.
    • 2017 September 27, Mac McClelland, “When ‘Not Guilty’ Is a Life Sentence”, in The New York Times Magazine[2]:
      “They’re testing you,” she said to her son, James, after she was finally cleared, metal-detected and led upstairs to the visiting room, a spare, linoleum-floored space inside the hospital’s high-security building.