Catchword: chatter bump
Part of Speech:
n. The part of speech reflects that used in the
full entry, and not necessarily the part of speech as it is used in the quotation below.
Quotation: Buick’s big Air Cushion Tires smooth away road irregularities; swallow the chatter-bumps, just as Knee-Action Wheels absorb the big jars and bumps.
Article or Document Title:
“Your New Car Must Have All For of These Features”
Article, Document, Publication, Web Site:
Wall Street Journal
Publishing Location:
16
Dateline:
advert.
Date of Publication:
Jan. 8, 1934
This sounds British. I know in the US these are called Rumble Strips.
by Jeffrey 21 Feb 06, 0922 GMT
It’s not explicitly British. All the citations above and most of the uses I found were North American. Also, I don’t believe “rumble strips” are the same things, which is why the editorial note specifies that “chatter bumps” occur naturally (which “rumble strips” do not) and that “chatter bumps” are created artificially for testing purposes of automobiles (which “rumble strips” are not, as far as I can tell).
by Grant Barrett 21 Feb 06, 0940 GMT