Tack pairs of ribbons on either side of the cover where the seat joins the back. |
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Tack is not defined, but presumably means saddle and bridle and normal accessories, such as girths, cinches and saddle pads. |
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Tack the lower two boards directly to your workbench to help hold the jig square. |
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Tack was her ordination sponsor and officiated at Smith's wedding. |
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Tack little methyl groups to the carbon backbone for durability, compactness and a ropy indifference to chemical abuse. |
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Tack testing tests the adhesive qualities of hydrocolloids ensuring that the hydrocolloid products adhere adequately to the skin. |
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Tack or staple the ends of the brush to ensure that it stays in place before reinstalling the sash. |
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Tack swivel with a free-turn, combined with the uniform profile of the forestay extrusion, give a perfectly furled sail and effective performance even when reefed. |
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Tack them to the fuselage floor with cyano, then reinforce the joints. |
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Boston Warehouse recently introduced Cup O' Joe Kitchen accessories, including a Cookie Jar, Tick Tack Timer and Napkin Ring Set. |
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Tack on the sign, unless the problem has a denominator of one or two. |
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The Father, Trainmaster, Rough Lock Bill and the Bully were played by Sung Tack Chung, who also convincingly altered his appearance, voice and presentation for each character. |
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Tack the work pieces with one spot and check for proper relative position of pieces. Sometimes the pieces can be separated and respotted if necessary. |
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In Cubao, the Samaritana Transformation Ministries group takes a different tack by offering women friendship and acceptance first and foremost. |
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One tiny dot of glue per shape is all that is needed to tack down the tissue to the acetate. |
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I think for my own sanity and emotional balance, that's the best tack I can take with it, really. |
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The vessel put about on the other tack, but for want of wind, or not having sail enough, she drifted into the ground swell towards the beach. |
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As it was, they were having to tack back and forth to maintain the southerly direction. |
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Her oar must have caught a little wave and rolled the boat straight over because they were going flat tack. |
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I don't know why the rest of my colleagues didn't say something to me because I was talking flat tack. |
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Again the Government changed tack, introducing a phased wind-down of the scheme for an additional six months. |
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I have to admit that new tack of his took the wind out of my sails a bit. |
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As every good captain knows, a schooner that's sailing a bit too close to the wind often goes slower and runs the risk of being put about on the wrong tack. |
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This includes good horse management, training methods, farriery and tack, and transportation. |
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Along the same tack, have taken a straw poll in our street, in return my neighbours had a whinge at me about the level of non resident illegal parking. |
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Pulling oil from the tar sands is costly, even more so when you tack transportation costs on top. |
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Sequenom, a longer-established firm, identifies SNPs by their different molecular weights, in a machine called a mass spectrometer. Genaissance, another haplotype company, is taking a different tack. |
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The grub was plain, plentiful and I can still savour the suppers of Spillers hard tack biscuit, with cheese and a mug of hot sweet cocoa. |
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One was for washing and shaving and the other was for your tea, hard tack and biscuits. |
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So they changed tack, and decided to professionalize the distribution. |
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Trade winds are still a little weak, fluctuatin from 8 to 13 knots in a northeasterly direction. This forces crews to tack constantly, and avoid any mistakes in the uncertain winds. |
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Messing up one tack can make you lose a lot of time! |
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The economic policies of Maggie Thatcher's elected government were a hard tack to swallow in some quarters, no-one would deny that. |
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It's now 14 days in the open boat, Salt sore eyes and dry parched throat, Hard tack rations now running so low, Our sail is adrift, we are too weak to row. |
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We offered tastings of typical 1812 foods, like hard tack and suet, and then let them taste some of our current 'scratch cooking,' like beef stew. |
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My guess is that cookhouses are going to be in short supply wherever it is they're sending us,' grumbled Bob, soaking some hard tack biscuit in his tea. |
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