«HOOKEDNESS»に関連する英語の本
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1
The Nature and Properties of Wool: Illustrated: with a ...
One great advantage of they modern machinery arises from the more complete
and uniform manner in which the staple is broken ; and thechief point ofattention
in the scrib1 ler is to break it no farther than'the hookedness of the -pile will admit
...
2
An essay on wool: containing a particular account of the ...
of the slightest texture imaginable, held together only by the natural hookedness
of the pile, of that disposition whicbit has to assume a zig zag, or waved form.
Hence it is evident that the two chief qualities, which carding wool requires, ...
The object of carding is to break the wool completely, to blend it most intimately,
so as to form it into a thin roll of the slightest texture, held together only by the
natural hookedness of the pile, which disposes it to assume a zigzag or waved
form.
4
Dictionnaire françois-anglois et anglois-françois ... revue ...
'HOOKEDNESS. (houk'-ed-necr),. t. [being. hooked. or. curvated]. Courburet. (.
HOOKEI)NOSED{honk '-nfiz'd '),adj. [having an aquiline nosr] Qui n Ic nez aquilin.
HOOP (hoiip'), s. [a wooden or in.n-clrcle to bind casks or barrels] Cerceau, ...
5
The Royal Standard English Dictionary: In Which The Words ...
to give a slight likeness Xd-um-brá'tion,/. a saint Iketch Xd-û-ná'tion,/. union, state
of being united Xd-ûn'cï-ty, s. crookednefs, hookedness Xd ûnquf', a.jpron. âd-fink
, crooked Xd'vo-ca-cy, /. vindication, defence, apoiogy Xd'To-catí, /• a pleader ...
6
A New Abridgment of Ainsworth's Dictionary: English and ...
[Grapple1, alicui reí uncura impingère. Together, fibula Declare p. con- kooVed,
like a hook, uncus, ob- uacua, aduncos. Made Aoo£ed,curvatua,falcatuj.
Hookedness , adnncitaa. A hoop [Cor cask в J vimen, circu- lua. To hoop [casks")
viere.
7
A Comprehensive History of the Woollen and Worsted ...
The object here is to break the wool completely, to blend it most intimately, and to
form it ,6 into a thin roll or ' roveling' of the slightest texture imaginable, held
together only by the natural hookedness of the pile, or that disposition which it
has to ...
8
An Analytical Dictionary of the English Language in which ...
Hoofshaped ib. Hook 374, 375 To Hook 375 Hooked ib. Hookedness ib.
Hooknosed ib. Hooky ib. Hoop and Lure 382 To Hoot cl Hooting 355 Horde 202
Horehound 108, 168, 286 Horizon clxxiii Horn of Plenty 109 Hornbeam 86
Horned ...
David BOOTH (Author of the Analytical Dictionary.), 1835
9
Aristotle's Treatise on Rhetoric
Just as hookedness or flatness of the nose, not only approach the mean in
proportion as they relax from the excess, but also, when they become excessively
hooked or flat, dispose the nostrils in such a way as no longer so resemble the
nasal ...
Aristotle, Theodore Alois Buckley, 1853
10
A Critical Pronouncing Dictionary and Expositor of the ...
v. a. to blind, do. ceive q, 1' Hoof, hoof. s. the horny part of a horse's Hook, hook. a
; any thing bent so as to catch hold—v. a. to catch, ensnare , ' Hooked, hbdk'éd. a.
bent, curvated Hookedness, hook'éd-nés. s. state of being bent Hoop, hdop. s.