Though just a handful of scenic roads wriggle through its untold ridges and valleys, dozens of waymarked trails thread the mountains. |
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In the Unland sculptures it is the unexpected combination of wood, thread and hair that achieves this effect. |
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The euro notes carry a watermark and security thread, plus a circular symbol, half of which is transparent. |
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The chip includes hyperthreading, which allows a processor to queue up one software thread while processing a different one. |
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Once you create the worker thread, you can queue work in a fashion similar to how work is queued with the default worker thread. |
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Ideally the technique is used on washable fabrics, since water is required to remove the marking lines and water-soluble thread. |
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There's good advice in this thread about shoes, belts, a nice analog watch, and a good-looking bag for your stuff. |
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The lubrication protects the individual strands of thread from abrading each other during normal usage. |
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He applied sandal paste on his forehead and wore the sacred thread across his body and was rigorous in the ablutions before prayers. |
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Then you do a final stitch way into the wadding, pull the thread taut and clip the end just above the surface. |
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The boy runs to a carpetmaker, who scoffs, "He has needs! What about me? I need thread for weaving my carpets." |
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But if a worm gear is to transmit mechanical power, it should be a metal worm having a thread angle of about thirty degrees. |
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He stopped when he saw her, her thread bare cotton skirt hiked up to her knees as her feet brushed the top of the water underneath a willow tree. |
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When the required number of strands are wound on, finish the thread by winding it around and down the finish post. |
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Pull out a foot or two of thread and wind it immediately around one iron hook and hang the hook again into the final row of woven cloth. |
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The thread not sewn is tangled in aesthetically pleasing patterns not unlike miniature Pollock drips, then tacked down by a gel medium. |
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The store was an Aladdin's cave, filled with boxes of buttons, and bolts of cloth, and reels of thread in every conceivable colour and shade. |
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They claimed that vast quantities of gold and silver thread and wire for making lace were being regularly imported into Ireland. |
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When serging decorative thread chains, cording or braid, dab seam sealant on the ends to prevent the chain from raveling. |
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Get the highest thread count percale that you can because that is smoother. |
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Worm tipped off with razorfish splints down each side and bound with elastic thread is a cracking bait. |
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It's the one common thread in us all that keeps us looking for cures for Aids and other diseases as well as reaching for the stars. |
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Decorative sheets vary not just in pattern and color but also in terms of fabrics, thread count, and finish. |
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Use actual fabric swatches and set the machine with the recommended settings, thread and needles. |
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When threading up any sewing machine make sure the foot is 'up' as this opens the tension disks and the thread goes between. |
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Another interesting thread is the juxtaposition of traditional and contemporary practice. |
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At first it had seemed such a good idea, to sit at the spinning wheel and spin the soft cream wool of her Jacob's sheep into fine woollen thread. |
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The machine is suited for high precision, infeed and single-revolution, thread rolling, worm rolling and roll sizing. |
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Laboriously, he strung them on a thread and hung them round his neck by way of adornment. |
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I have an old machine which has Whitworth screws on so to find out which they were I got a Whitworth thread gauge from my local D.I.Y. shop. |
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The common thread is that all three are pro-western, liberal economic reformers. |
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They were also less prone to misalignment or cross threading than either the traditional design or even the Whitworth thread. |
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The two are woven together by the common thread of trying to readapt to a normal life after a landmark experience. |
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You want to make this long enough so that you don't run out of thread before you are done lacing it through the body twice. |
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The thread of disbelief in his voice was laced with a subtle smear of sympathy. |
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The hand that could knit a jumper in two evenings, and thread a needle, could fire a gun. |
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The scarf's purpose is to allow the bobbin case hook to get close to the needle eye and catch the thread to form a stitch. |
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In this thread, you allude to those continuing misfortunes, and mention Seth by name in, I think, your third or fourth post. |
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Typically, American stocking factories spun their own wool into yarn or thread. |
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The floor was littered with baskets of differently-colored yarn and thread, and a few spinning wheels stood near the far end of the chamber. |
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These creases are in turn overlaid by circles and whorls of black thread stitching. |
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My mother sewed most of my clothes as a child, so I have an affinity for patterns, cloth, thread and yarn. |
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I have crewel yarn and silk thread, and I'm determined to make something of it. |
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And yet their oeuvre nevertheless seems to have a consistent thread running through it. |
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I'm amazed at how preachy and judgemental everyone is being in this thread. |
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There was the outline, and around this outline ran a well-defined sewn thread which had, it appeared, attached the welt to the sole. |
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It was high-ceilinged and raftered with white stone set with gems, and on the walls were hung tapestries of gold thread. |
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The common yucca, Y. filamentosa, is also known as Eve's thread or Adam's needle, since both threads and needles can be made from the leaves. |
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That thread is dropped, though, in favor of a number of weepy aspects that drive the ending to saccharine heights. |
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Armed with the strongest and finest cotton thread in the world, Bolton's weavers were able to produce the finest cotton material in the world. |
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She stood frozen, gazing at the sheer beauty of the dress, each thread intricately woven to create perfection. |
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Call me lazy, but I don't really want to grow my own cotton, spin my own thread, weave my own cloth, and sew a shirt out of it. |
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So the overall effect from some distance away was of a green thread that moved steadily, but jiggled and shook like a sensuous conga line. |
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Apparently, the thread count of one's bed sheets is of great importance. |
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Other handy bits and pieces like plasters, handkerchief, aftersun and a needle and thread can also come in handy, and don't take up too much room. |
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Both composers have the gift of following the twists and turns of often complex poetry without resorting to faux recitative or to dropping a melodic thread. |
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This is not true, but in the case of cotton grown in Egypt, the higher thread count means the fabric will be incredibly strong and will last for years and years. |
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The weave or thread count of the towel has no significance in this case. |
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That is the red thread of continuity, which runs from Decline 1.0 with Sputnik to Decline 5.0 with the post-crash. |
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Use single thread, lubricated woodscrew with slots to avoid splitting. |
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If you scaled up the thickness of the DNA chain to that of ordinary sewing thread, you would need a 4 kilometer reel to represent the length in an average human chromosome. |
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The rays were detected by a calcium sulfide thread that glowed slightly in the dark when the rays were refracted through a 60-degree angle prism of aluminum. |
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One thread of the new book concerns the effect of digitalization on creative artistry. |
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The cotton would be cleaned and then spun into yarn or thread. |
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They are always suspended over a precipice, dangling by a slender thread that shows every sign of snapping. |
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Check out the lengthy comment thread about Bridgewater at the jobs site One Day One Job. |
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Whether he incited an angry Internet troll in a chatroom debate is another thread the police are keen to unravel. |
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If the thread is not joinable, its resources will be freed automatically. |
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You'll need a plastic PVC cap for one end of the pipe, and on the other end you'll need an adapter to convert the PVC pipe to a standard pipe thread. |
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Beads can be purchased prestrung on lengths of thread or loose in vials or plastic bags. |
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The fiber is most often spun into yarn or thread and used to make a soft, breathable textile. |
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The spinning frame is an Industrial Revolution invention for spinning thread or yarn from fibres such as wool or cotton in a mechanized way. |
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Lisle is composed of two strands that have each been twisted an extra twist per inch than ordinary yarns and combined to create a single thread. |
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In the middle of the square a fountain poured a quavery thread of shining water into its stone font. |
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Methods were developed to cut screw thread to a greater precision than that of the feed screw in the lathe being used. |
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Cotton had been too coarse for lace, but by 1805 Houldsworths of Manchester were producing reliable 300 count cotton thread. |
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Warp and weft are terms for the two basic components used in weaving to turn thread or yarn into fabric. |
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The yarn can be doubled and processed into thread, or prepared for weaving. |
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The mule's importance was that it could spin thread better than could be done by hand, which led to ever finer thread. |
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The spinning jenny was effective and could be operated by hand, but it produced weaker thread that could only be used for the weft part of cloth. |
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Spinning at differing speeds, these pulled the thread continuously while other parts twisted it as it wound onto the heavy spindles. |
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When the condition expression is false, the thread blocks on the condition variable. |
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On the return, the roving is clamped and the spindles reversed to take up the newly spun thread. |
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A single thread filament is too thin to use on its own so women combine many threads to produce a thicker, usable fiber. |
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A counter faller under the thread was made to rise to take in the slack caused by backing off. |
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This is called the gain of the carriage, its purpose being to eliminate all irregularities in the fineness of the thread. |
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The speed of revolution of the spindle must vary, as the faller is guiding the thread upon the larger or smaller diameter of the cone of the cop. |
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If the break happened on the winding stroke the spindle might have to be stopped while the thread was found. |
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In Lancashire before industrialisation, families would work at home spinning thread while scrags of mutton stewed slowly over a low fire. |
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These bars could be drawn along the top of the frame by the spinner's left hand thus extending the thread. |
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The spinner used his right hand to rapidly turn a wheel which caused all the spindles to revolve, and the thread to be spun. |
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As the tower clears us downwind for landing, we thread our way gingerly through a hurtling mass of aerobating lightplanes. |
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To become fully automatic, a loom needs a filling stop motion which will brake the loom, if the weft thread breaks. |
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These tells, located over a special metal circuit, are held up by the tension of the thread coming from the warp. |
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Should the warp thread be broken, the tells will drop and cause the machine to stop working. |
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With the increased speed of weaving, weavers were able to use more thread than spinners could produce. |
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A shuttle is a tool designed to neatly and compactly store a holder that carries the thread of the weft yarn while weaving with a loom. |
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One other subtle difference between these two toolholders is the thread used to hold the pull stud. |
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Maudslay's invention about 1800 of a metal lathe to cut metal enabled the manufacture of standard screw thread sizes. |
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Standard screw thread sizes allowed interchangeable parts and the development of mass production. |
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Tennis balls were originally made of cloth strips stitched together with thread and stuffed with feathers. |
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A worker called a sewer removed and replaced the bags, and sewed full bags shut with a needle and thread. |
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Lace is a delicate fabric made of yarn or thread in an open weblike pattern, made by machine or by hand. |
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Now lace is often made with cotton thread, although linen and silk threads are still available. |
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A few modern artists make lace with a fine copper or silver wire instead of thread. |
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He became interested in spinning and carding machinery that turned raw cotton into thread. |
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On a conventional loom, the weft thread is carried on a pirn, in a shuttle that passes through the shed. |
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It could make cotton thread thin and strong enough for the warp, or long threads, of cloth. |
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The loom remained the same but with the increased volume of thread it could be operated continuously. |
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A spinning wheel is a device for spinning thread or yarn from natural or synthetic fibres. |
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The jacquard allowed individual control of each warp thread, row by row without repeating, so very complex patterns were suddenly feasible. |
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The women of the house would spin the thread they needed, and attend to finishing. |
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Later women took to weaving, they obtained their thread from the spinning mill, and working as outworkers on a piecework contract. |
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Processed products included cotton textiles, yarns, thread, silk, jute products, metalware, and foods such as sugar, oils and butter. |
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A bobbin is a spindle or cylinder, with or without flanges, on which wire, yarn, thread or film is wound. |
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Often, the bobbins are 'spangled' to provide additional weight to keep the thread in tension. |
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The Cathedral is realism, profound in its philosophy and delicate in its thread. |
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I just finished a well-conceived brainstorm that concluded this thread is ridonkulous only if you continue to read. |
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You realize, of course, that this thread would probably get us lynched by the large Rocketshipper population on the net. |
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This is known as windowed thread and further increases the counterfeit resistance of the banknote paper. |
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With that, Mikhail sat down to place spools of thread on the serger, studying the directions and clearly dismissing her. |
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Kenna hantam until nothing to say in the old thread then start a new one to get ppl oin your side without your old posts to sia suay you. |
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This thread has degenerated now into a debate about whose sky fairy is the true sky fairy and therefore has reached the point of total absurdity. |
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I remember you now. You're that smegger who floods a thread with the same message over and over...and the same smegger who top-posts. |
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Vote now, as this thread is sure to make its way into squirrelable territory before long! |
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In 1875 Swan returned to consider the problem of the light bulb with the aid of a better vacuum and a carbonized thread as a filament. |
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This may have been camel's hair thread commonly used in tailor making of clothes. |
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We drilled a hole and then cut the threads with the proper tap to match the valve's thread. |
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I become the wind. I wind and wend my mournsome way, I thread the trees with keening. |
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I was pondering these things, when an incident, and a somewhat unexpected one, broke the thread of my musings. |
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SessionFactory objects are threadsafe, so it is not necessary to obtain one for each thread. |
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The recent thread where nerd fought nerd over which geeky game was better got me to thinking about my own particular brand of geekery. |
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Most banknotes are made using the mould made process in which a watermark and thread is incorporated during the paper forming process. |
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The most ornate and flashy piece of clothing was the turban. It was red in colour with a might turra of gold thread. |
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It may be that pulling on a heddle string has involved an unheddled thread that can be pulled loose. |
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A child of the Great Depression, Grandma would never throw away a dishtowel until it had more holes than thread. |
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She was heaving now, her left side seizing up as if an unsnappable thread were being pulled through it to convulse it. |
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Compared to back-projection, parallelization efficiency in projection is highly limited by racing condition and thread unsynchronization. |
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This directive requires we check the afterbody bolts for proper thread count and nut plates for security. |
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Pull out the basting thread, gently remove the voile from the three-minute sample, and reshape the sample with a steam iron. |
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Women's clothes are often decorated with tribal motifs, coins, sequins, metallic thread, and appliques. |
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As I look at the stacks of neatly folded linens, I see more than yard goods and thread. |
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Over the Yule period write wishes on strips of paper and thread them onto the Yule wreath. |
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The installers attempted to thread the fish tape through the conduit, but were unable to reach around the tight bend in the tube. |
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The tradeoff is that the first time an async event causes a scheduling point, it incurs the thread creation overhead that it has avoided. |
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When it spins its cocoon, each larva produces an exceedingly long, slender thread of silk. |
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Traditionally it is worked on white fabric with white cotton thread but in recent years other colors and threads are popular. |
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Once relegated to guybrows as men tend to have coarse hair, women are now choosing to wax their eyebrows than thread them more than ever. |
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I taught my students how In thread the needle, a basic running stitch and a backstitch, and how to tie off to change yarn. |
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Aniconism is a general dislike of either all figurative images, or often just religious ones, and has been a thread in many major religions. |
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The main quills may be dyed, and then applied in combination with thread to embellish leather accessories such as knife sheaths and leather bags. |
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Old Cigfolla, who despite stiff joints could outspin any of them, drew out a fine thread of flax. |
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Primary air entanglement is applied to give the yarn better cohesion and thus achieve a smoother, quieter thread path over the godets. |
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The Godardian vision of a universe that is both lost and recuperable in time is the thread that holds this movie and all his others together. |
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As an avid button collector, I have had to develop an efficient way of removing the nubbin of thread from the buttonhole. |
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Though thread counts are indeed quite specific, they can be modified in certain circumstances, depending on the desired size of the tartan. |
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It consists of seventy fine spun cotton threads, gimped or tied around with thread by a machine similar to that for wrapping bonnet wire. |
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And arborets of jointed stone were there, And plants of fibres fine as silkworm's thread. |
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The thread count not only describes the width of the stripes on a sett, but also the colours used. |
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Next we create a new thread, and that thread creates a new application domain, loads, and executes an assembly. |
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Muriel Smith is also a dab hand with needle and thread to resew reformatted parts back together. |
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These include a metallic security thread embedded in every banknote, which contains the numerical value of the note and the note's bridge image. |
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The steep slate roofs were topped with bronze finials so tall and fanciful they looked like drops of liquid sliding down a thread. |
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By combining it with watermarking technology the thread can be made to surface periodically on one side only. |
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Place your thumb on top of the shank and your bent index finger under the hair and pull the tying thread tight to flair it. |
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To do this, skeins of silk thread are immersed in large tubs of hydrogen peroxide. |
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Too close a spacing caused the fibres to break while too distant a spacing caused uneven thread. |
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He bastes the coat together with thick white thread almost like string, using stitches big enough to be ripped out easily later. |
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The system throttled itself to batches of 50 requests at a time to keep the thread count under control. |
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The embroidery edging the cloak is often in silver or gold thread and it is intricate in detail. |
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The supply of thread has always limited the output of a weaver. |
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Each individual warp thread in a fabric is called a warp end or end. |
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A big man wearing an agbada with gold thread embroidery at the neck and sleeves came up to him holding a glass of champagne between his thumb and forefinger. |
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He wore a pagdi embroidered with gold and silver thread on his head, a tight-fitting intricately patterned angarkha, and tight pajamas buttoned at the ankles. |
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Wind the bobbin, place it in the machine, and raise the thread. |
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A common thread we have found with sufferers of compassion fatigue symptoms has been the progressive loss in their sense of connection and community. |
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Which thread does one first insert into the garment, blue or white? How long are the fringes? What is the minimum size of a fringe-worthy garment? |
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These ridges are prominent, about the thickness of a coarse thread, very numerous, irregular, and run into one another, but towards the bottom, always furcate or divide. |
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Necessary and productive as a many-heddled loom is, there is something basic and satisfying about covering each warp thread by hand, in a tapestry or needle technique. |
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Maudslay perfected the slide rest lathe, which could cut machine screws of different thread pitches by using changeable gears between the spindle and the lead screw. |
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The wool was spun into thread on isolated farms and collected by merchants to be woven, fulled, dyed and finished in thriving towns such as Dunster. |
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With the help of other local craftsmen the team produced the spinning frame, which produced a stronger thread than the spinning jenny produced by James Hargreaves. |
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I hereby declare this thread officially lulzworthy. Carry on. |
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Bottom also becomes Ariadne's thread which guides the lovers. |
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There's another guy playing Dylan as a formal poet facing some kind of muggle inquisition, but this is the movie's briefest and least consequential thread. |
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Much like your power of necroposting a thread long considered dead. |
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The thread manufacturers Coats plc had its origin in that trade. |
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The thread is a simple looking security component found in most banknotes. |
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The first and last threads of the thread count are the pivot points. |
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Each thread in the warp crosses each thread in the weft at right angles. |
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This means the warp and weft will have alternate thread counts. |
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The function of the spiral thread is uncertain, but it may absorb stress when prey tries to escape, and thus prevent the collobast from being torn apart. |
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Because Professor Soler told me that you had to investigate things step by step, that you had to find a thread to follow and follow it, and find everything out in its order. |
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The first form of sewing was probably tying together animal skins using thorns and sharpened rocks as needles, with animal sinew or plant material as thread. |
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These factors all contribute to the ability of the whole cocoon to be unravelled as one continuous thread, permitting a much stronger cloth to be woven from the silk. |
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Since a single thread is too fine and fragile for commercial use, anywhere from three to ten strands are spun together to form a single thread of silk. |
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The tail hairs served as flyswatters, bracelets, necklaces and thread. |
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Embroidery and drawn thread work are done by hand to produce clothing, as well as tablecloths and other home textiles for sale in local crafts markets. |
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It can either be used in knitted or woven fabrics, as it can be blended with elastine to make a stretchier thread for knitted fabrics, and apparel such as stretch jeans. |
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This produced thread suitable for warp, but the multiple rollers required much more energy input and demanded that the device be driven by a water wheel. |
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William Eaton, in 1818, improved the winding of the thread by using two faller wires and performing a backing off at the end of the outward traverse. |
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The two piecers would thus need to repair the thread within 15 to 20 seconds while the mule was in motion but once they had the thread it took under three seconds. |
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When the bars were returned, the thread wound onto the spindle. |
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Joseph Whitworth, at that time one of Clement's journeymen afterwards played a major role in such standardisation, the Whitworth thread becoming a standard for machine screws. |
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One warp thread is called an end and one weft thread is called a pick. |
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A single thread of the weft crossing the warp is called a pick. |
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There was thus a shortage of thread or a surplus of weaving capacity. |
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Braiding with rubberbands is quicker than sewing in yarn or thread but it is not acceptable for high-level competition, and it will break off hairs and damage the mane. |
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Bats use supersounds as a substitute for eyes. When a maze of silk threads was strung across a room, bats negotiated the maze at high speed without touching a thread. |
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If only you had pulled on the thread of my wool, if you had undone my fabric, mesh by mesh... entangled in each one was a temptuous thought and a name I will not forget. |
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Her robes shimmered with wards of unsight stitched in electrum thread. |
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Your windster must always have a bowl of cold water by her, to dip her fingers in, and to sprinkle very often the said bar, that the heat may not burn the thread. |
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Lengthy tasks must run asynchronously on a different executable thread so that it remains in the background and does not interfere with the user interface. |
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She wore her wedding lehnga, a deep-magenta full skirt and fitted blouse, all embroidered with silver and gold thread and blue, pink and silver beads. |
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