Michael gives measurements for the height of the wale at the midship frame. |
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Liberty, a firm based in the United Kingdom, has begun printing on fine wale lightweight corduroy, noted Ed Harding, the firm's U.S. agent. |
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Another wale was broken downward off the dock as the vessel rolled over and one pile was damaged by the ladder rungs on the A-frame gantry. |
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A wale is an almost unnoticeable, but very important band of weave. |
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Corduroy, strong durable fabric with a rounded cord, rib, or wale surface formed by cut pile yarn. |
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Twill, one of the three basic textile weaves, producing a fabric with a diagonal rib, ridge, or wale. |
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Beneath he was wearing nothing but an undershirt and corduroy pants so worn the wale was almost gone and one knee was out. |
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The project will re-anchor the structure and include sheathing, wale, curb and decking repairs. |
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The spare trawl doors which were overhanging the starboard ship side became caught under the wale of the wharf on a rising tide. |
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A moderate application of throttle pressure is met with vigorous forward thrust and a menacing wale from the exhaust. |
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Damaged wale on the front of the wharf showing the broken wood and the securing bolts bent upward. |
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Other archaic English forms include wal, wale, whal, whalle, whaille, wheal, etc. |
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In the brutal story, a kung fu student must avenge the killing of his teacher by Japanese karate masters, and hardens his fists in order to wale on his enemies. |
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One wale on the dock apron front was broken. |
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When faced with an adulthood that offered few options, grinding poverty and marriage to a man who drank too much and came home to wale on his own family or...no beatings. |
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