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bradawl
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bradawl
bradawl (ˈbrædɔːl) [app. f. brad n. + awl, denoting an awl for making holes to insert brads; though the ON. bragð-alr lit. ‘twirling awl’, a fire-drill, suggests a different derivation.] A kind of small boring tool, a sprig-bit.1823 P. Nicholson Pract. Build. 238 Brad-awl..is the smallest tool used ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Bradawl
Purpose
A bradawl is used to make indentations in wood or other materials in order to ease the insertion of a nail or screw. The bradawl is then twisted through 90 degrees which displaces the fibres creating a hole.
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bradawl
bradawl/ˈbrdɔ:l; `brædˌɔl/ nsmall hand-tool with a sharp point for boring holes 小锥子.
牛津英汉双解词典
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Melaleuca subulata
Its leaves are arranged alternately and are long, wide, cylindrical or shaped like a bradawl.
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How to use "would" in a sentence - WordHippo
A whole winter brooding on the events of August would be unthinkable for such a meticulous mind.: Such draconian measures would be almost unthinkable in a democratic system.: When she saw the wound she realised she would not be able to take the bradawl out so she called an ambulance.: An eighteen inch snood dropped off from the swivel so that the two baits would fish almost in line with one ...
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Awl
Awl may refer to:
Tools
Bradawl, a woodworking hand tool for making small holes
Scratch awl, a woodworking layout and point-making tool used to scribe
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brog
▪ I. brog, n. dial. (brɒg) [Of uncertain origin. (Sc. also brɔg, brog) the Gaelic brog ‘awl’, must, according to Thurneysen, be an adopted word.] 1. A pricking or boring instrument: the common name in Scotland of a bradawl; also, an awl.1808 in Jamieson. 1861 Ramsay Remin. Ser. ii. 59 But oh, please...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Scratch awl
See also
Bradawl
Stitching awl
References
Woodworking measuring instruments
Woodworking hand tools
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awl
awl (ɔːl) Forms: 1 æl, eal, 1–4 al, 3 el, 3–5 alle, 3–7 aule, 4 ele, 6 awle, 6–7 all, 8 aul, 8– awl; also 5 nal, 6 nalle, 6–7 nall, 7 naul, nawl(e. [OE. æl, cognate with OHG. ala, MHG. ale, mod.G. ahle, ON. alr (cf. Skr. árá). The length of the vowel in the old Germanic languages is uncertain; and t...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Roy Benson
Benson elaborated his Chinese Sticks in "Starlight" on The Pillars of Soloman and the Magic Bradawl, published in Hoffman's Modern Magic.
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sprig
▪ I. sprig, n.1 (sprɪg) Also 4–5 sprigge, 5–6 spryg(ge, 6 sprygg, 9 sprigg. [Of obscure origin.] 1. A small slender nail, either wedge-shaped and headless, or square-bodied with a slight head on one side. † Also collect. In both senses, but now especially in the second, indentical with a brad.1359 [...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Polikarpov DI-1
Many panel pins were not connected to the structure at all and many of the bradawl holes necessary to equalize pressure between the inside of the wing
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belly
▪ I. belly, n. (ˈbɛlɪ) Forms: 3–4 bali, 4 baly(e, 4–5 bale, 4–6 bely, (5 bylly), 6 bally, bealy(e, bellye, 6–7 bellie, 5– belly. [ME. bali, bely:—OE. bæliᵹ, bęliᵹ, earlier bælᵹ, bęlᵹ ‘bag, skin, envelope, hull (of beans and peas),’ identical with ON. belgr ‘skin, bag,’ OHG. balg, MDu. balch, Goth. b...
Oxford English Dictionary
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James Johnston (missionary)
of oxen for the motor power, brick-making machines, smithy with patent forge, miner's workshop, fitted with every tool the mechanic requires, from a bradawl
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Drill
wood-cutting blade at the bottom and a T-shaped handle
Brace, a modified auger powered by means of a crankshaft
Gimlet, a small tool for drilling holes
Bradawl
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