(1) A clutch (as on the rear wheel of a bicycle, as in coasting
(2) A clutch (as on the rear wheel of a bicycle) that allows wheels to turn freely (as in coasting)
(1) Live unhurriedly, irresponsibly, or freely
(2) Coast in a vehicle using the freewheel
(3) Live unhurriedly
(4) irresponsibly
(5) or freely
(1) If it is too tight and you can get the freewheel off, you can loosen it much more easily by just using the cone wrenches.
(2) He showed us how surprisingly easy it is to open the freewheel and service the bearings or pawls, although I doubt the sealed mechanism requires much maintenance.
(3) Paul seems to think we're going to freewheel down it.
(4) You will have to build another rim onto that hub so that you can twist the hub hard enough to unscrew the freewheel .
(5) It was like peddling your guts out to get up a hill, only to freewheel down the other side.
(6) Teenagers freewheel on cycles, their feet in the air.
(7) The island measures three miles by two miles and it is possible to hire a bicycle to freewheel through the glorious vegetation and marvel at the strange granite rock formations.
(8) I do so twice before I reach the summit, but I still feel triumphant as I freewheel down to the hostel on the other side.
(9) I've been doing my own work for 20 years, but I can't figure out how to get any lube into the freewheel , much less how to actually open it up.
(10) Seriously, that kind of freewheeling thinking - the kind that cuts swathes through reason and social convention while still maintaining a sort of sweet petulance - will take you far in life.
(11) I'd freewheeled down the hill, trees flashing past, the late summer sunlight flickering above my head.
(12) Free rein soon led to freewheeling corruption as well.
(13) It freewheeled down the hill and collided with the car in which Mrs Reilly and her daughter were travelling.
(14) By contrast, Guero sounds instantly Beck-like, sharing its producers, the Dust Brothers, and its freewheeling ethos with 1996's widely adored Odelay.
(15) And by summing up the freewheeling era in which his lack of self-control met his publisher's limitless expense account, Ellis is ready to move on.
(16) We swept through the town of Grindelwald and freewheeled along the bank of the Lutschine river.
(17) I would like for our society to retain its skepticism of power and its freewheeling entrepreneurialism.
(18) They also maintain that the company's freewheeling engineering culture is not a liability but an asset.
(19) There are also current models of freewheels that do not have an adequate design for removal.
(20) Even - perhaps especially - in the freewheeling digital worlds of today and tomorrow, artists and audiences will find each other.
(21) But in recent years, there have been allegations that the area isn't just a collection of freewheeling border towns.
(22) As a people we seem determined to lend credence to the image of us as a nation of freewheeling boozers with a sizeable streak of irresponsibility in our make-up.
(23) Then we freewheeled down countless switchbacks to Sangdu, nestled in the corner of a wide earthy valley dotted with ponies, pigs and yaks.
(24) It was sheer physical pleasure, freewheeling or skimming along with minimum effort through meadows, orchards, vineyards, woods and tiny towns with squares and window boxes.
(25) My fastest-ever speed was 75 mph, freewheeling down a hill in the Pyrenees.
(26) One day in an attempt to test myself I reversed the direction I rode around the house, which involved freewheeling through a minor dip in the section.
(27) As I freewheeled and carefully negotiated the ruts, I enjoyed views of Wetwang, partially hidden in trees, and surrounded by all that cultivated land Sir Tatton was describing.
(28) The freewheeling corporate spending that goes on in Augusta during the Masters Tournament is why many local businesses call the annual event u2018Christmas in April.u2019
(29) It appropriates the popular American ideal of freedom to advertise the so-called freewheeling lifestyle.
(30) Its freewheeling local agents are periodically accused - and sometimes even convicted - of drug trafficking and murder.
drift