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  • 61 Carpets

    The principal types are Axminster, Brussels and Wilton, and brief particulars of each are given below. A more detailed description is given under each name. Axminster is a cut fabric made any width and with any number of colours. It is not produced on a jacquard, therefore the pile does not show on the back. The design is developed by a series of tufts which are bound into the fabric, every tuft is on the surface and only the foundation cloth is seen at the back. There are two principal varieties of these carpets, the Chenille Axminster and the Machine tufted Axminster. The Chenille type is made by two distinct operations, that of manufacturing the chenille weft and that of weaving the carpet with this weft. The " fur or chenille is first woven on an ordinary loom (see chenille) and when cut into the strips is used as weft with a linen, jute or folded cotton warp. The chenille is made preferably with the leno way of shedding in order to bind the wool yarn more firmly. All the figuring weft is on the surface and not embedded in the fabric. The chenille weft is often inserted by hand, but several mechanical methods for doing the work are now in use. From three to six tufts per inch are usual. The chenille Axminster Carpet is also known as the Patent Axminster carpet. The machine-tufted type or Royal Axminster is also formed from pile tufts previously prepared and afterwards woven in the ground warp and bound into the fabric with a binding weft. The tufts may be inserted by hand and the pile is all on the surface of the fabric. This pile is a warp product, whereas for the chenille variety it is weft. Axminster carpets are a product of skill and patience and any number of colours can be used. There are several varieties of machine-made axminster carpets. Wilton is a cut pile fabric woven 27-in. wide from not more than six colours, the yarns are fine counts and design produced by jacquards. Brussels is made almost in the same way as a Wilton, but the pile is not cut and this shows as loops on the face. The yarn is much coarser than for Wiltons. Kidderminster - A carpet made from two or more plain cloths woven together. Each cloth is brought on the face for figuring as required. Turkish - These are hand made. The pile is put into the ground warp by hand as tufts and knotted round them according to pattern. There are two picks of ground weft between each row of pile. Tapestry - Carpets woven from printed warps. The pile is cut or left uncut as required for the design. Persian - Carpets similar to Turkish, being hand made. See also Axminster, Brussels, Kidderminster, Persian Tapestry, Turkish, Wilton Carpets, Body Brussels, Brusselette, Ingrain.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Carpets

  • 62 قطع

    قَطَّعَ \ chop: to cut sth. (meat, wood, etc.) by a blow with an axe or other sharp tool: He chopped the meat before cooking it. He chopped a piece of wood in two. shred: to tear or cut sth. (esp. food, in preparation for cooking) into little strips. \ قَطَّعَ إربًا \ hack: to cut roughly: He hacked the meat into pieces. \ قَطَّعَ إلى أجزاء صغيرة \ chop off: to remove by chopping: She chopped off a long piece of wood for the fire. \ قَطَّعَ إلى شَرَائح \ slice: to cut (food) into slices. \ قَطَّعَ بخشونة \ hack: to cut roughly: He hacked the meat into pieces.

    Arabic-English dictionary > قطع

  • 63 po|ciąć

    pf (potnę, pocięła, pocięli) vt 1. (na kawałki) to cut [materiał, szkło, metal] (czymś with sth)
    - pociąć coś na plasterki to slice sth (up)
    - pociąć coś na paski to cut sth into strips
    - pociąć papier nożyczkami to cut paper with scissors
    - pociąć coś na złom to turn sth into scrap
    - pociąć drewno piłą/siekierą to saw/chop some wood
    - stos pociętego drewna (piłą) a pile of sawn wood; (siekierą) a pile of chopped wood ciąć
    2. (rozciąć) to slash [rękę, siedzenie, obraz]; (porysować) to score [blat, ławkę]
    - pociąć kogoś nożem to slash sb with a knife
    - pociąć komuś opony to slash sb’s tyres
    - stół pocięty scyzorykiem a table top sratched with a pocketknife
    - czoło pocięte zmarszczkami przen. a forehead furrowed with wrinkles
    - krajobraz pocięty głębokimi wąwozami przen. a landscape furrowed with deep gorges
    3. pot. (pogryźć) [komary, muchy] to bite; [mole] to eat
    - pocięły go osy he was stung by wasps
    - mrówki mnie pocięły I was bitten by ants
    - mole pocięły mi płaszcz moths ate my coat
    - spodnie pocięte przez mole moth-eaten trousers
    pociąć się pot. 1. (popełnić samobójstwo) to slash one’s wrist 2. (pokaleczyć się nawzajem) to slash each other
    - pocięli się brzytwami they slashed each other with razors

    The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > po|ciąć

  • 64 inglete

    m.
    1 diagonal, oblique line which divides a square into two triangles.
    2 forty-five degree angle.
    3 miter joint, forty-five-degree joint of two piece of wood, miter, mitre.
    * * *
    1 mitre (US miter)
    * * *
    SM (=ángulo) angle of 45º; (=ensambladura) mitre joint
    * * *
    = mitre [miter, -USA].
    Ex. This is the first of two sheets showing you how to plan, mark up and cut mitres using a saw.
    * * *
    = mitre [miter, -USA].

    Ex: This is the first of two sheets showing you how to plan, mark up and cut mitres using a saw.

    * * *
    (ángulo) 45° angle, miter*; (junta) miter* joint
    * * *

    inglete m Geom 45° angle: al enmarcar un cuadro se cortan las maderas del marco en inglete, the wood strips used for making picture frames are are cut at 45° angles
    * * *
    mitre (joint)
    * * *
    : miter joint

    Spanish-English dictionary > inglete

  • 65 резать

    гл. cut; slit

    цвета, которые режут глазcolours that cut

    Синонимический ряд:
    1. жарить (глаг.) дуть; жарить; крыть; лупить; садить; чесать; шпарить
    2. колоть (глаг.) бить; забивать; колоть
    3. оперировать (глаг.) делать операцию; оперировать
    4. проваливать (глаг.) засыпать; проваливать; срезать
    5. разрезать (глаг.) кромсать; разрезать; разрезывать

    Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > резать

  • 66 Abnakee Rug

    Modern American hooked rug made on a coarse and open jute burlap ground. Unbleached, all wool, twilled flannel, is dyed with vegetable dyes and cut lengthwise into strips of 1/4-in. width. These strips are hooked through the burlap to form the pile. The patterns are bold.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Abnakee Rug

  • 67 List Carpet

    A factory-carpet made similar to the home-made rag carpets in the U.S.A. A very strong and thick cotton warp is used and the weft is made of waste cuttings from tailors' shops and clothing factories. The term is also applied to rag carpets formerly largely made by pioneer farmers as above, but the weft was made of discarded clothing cut into narrow strips and these strips stitched together in long lengths.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > List Carpet

  • 68 Paper Yarn

    Paper is wound in roll form and then cut into narrow flat strips from 1/4-in. upward. After damping, the edges of the strips are turned and then twisted into round thread form. Paper yarn is used for weft in fabrics such as canvas, mats, packsheets, for the backs of rugs and carpets, and is also made into fancy articles. If required in colours it is dyed in the pulp form. The paper stripes may be twisted around a core of fibre to give strength.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Paper Yarn

  • 69 lime

    "used in: - lime in long strips; in tatters; in rags. - lime kesmek /ı/ to cut (something) into long, narrow strips."

    Saja Türkçe - İngilizce Sözlük > lime

  • 70 émincer

    émincer [emɛ̃se]
    ➭ TABLE 3 transitive verb
    * * *
    emɛ̃se
    verbe transitif to slice [something] thinly
    * * *
    emɛ̃se vt
    * * *
    émincer verb table: placer vtr to slice [sth] thinly, to cut [sth] into thin slices [aliment].
    [emɛ̃se] verbe transitif

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > émincer

  • 71 STRENGR

    (-jar or -s; pl. -ir, gen. -ja), m.
    1) string, cord, rope (strengir til at festa með hús); þeir ristu í strengi feldi sína, they cut their cloaks into strips;
    2) anchor-cable; drekinn flaut um strengi, rode at anchor; liggja um strengi, to lie at anchor;
    4) string of an instrument (glumðu strengir);
    5) narrow channel of water, swift current (slyðrur nökkurar rak ofan eptir strengnum).
    * * *
    m., gen. strengjar, pl. strengir, strengja, strengjum, strengi; [A. S. streng; Engl. string; O. H. G. strang; Dan. stræng]:—a string, cord, rope, with a notion of being hard-twisted; var strengr snaraðr at fótum þeim öllum, of an execution, Fms. i. 179; bundnir á einum streng, xi. 146; leysa menn ór strengnum, 147; strengir til at festa með hús, Nj. 115; þeir ristu í strengi feldi sína, they cut and twisted their cloaks into ropes, Ó. H. 152, Fms. xi. 3.
    2. naut. a cable(anchor-cable, mooring-rope); bera strengi á land, Nj. 273; þeir skutu út bryggjunum ok slógu strenginum, ok drógu út skipin, Eg. 75; drekinn flaut um strengi, rode at anchor, Fas. i. 395; liggja um strengi, to lie at anchor, Ld. 76; heimta skipin út undir strengina, Fms. viii. 202, 379; draga upp strengi sína, Ó. H. 136; ek fæ dreng til strengjar, Fs. (in a verse); til strengjar, Grág. ii. 399; gékk í sundr akkeris-strengrinn … hann kafaði eptir strengnum, Fs. 92; rann á blásandi byrr svá at stóð á hverjum streng, Fas. iii. 630; hann lét þekja sundit ok bera strengi á land, Nj. 273; at skip þeirra hafi eigi rúm, ok eigi liggi skip á strengjum þeirra, N. G. L. ii. 281; höfðu þeir þá strengja-raun mikla, Fms. ii. 16.
    3. spec. usages, a bow-string (boga-strengr); brast strengr, en ör sú er skotið var …, Fms. i. 182; boga ok streng á, N. G. L. ii. 41; boga-strengr, Nj. 115, 116: the string of an instrument, strengir gullu, Og. 30; glumdu strengir, Akv. 31; drepa strengi, Stj. 458; þann streng hafði hann ekki fyrr slegit, Fas. iii. 223; harpa strengja rúin, Núm. (fine): of a bell-rope, Hom. 69: buxna-strengr, the cord round the top of a pair of breeches.
    4. a narrow channel of water; áin rennr í streng, the river flows in a narrow channel.
    COMPDS: strengjaferja, strengjalauss.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > STRENGR

  • 72 truncō

        truncō āvī, ātus, āre    [2 truncus], to maim, mutilate, shorten, cut off: truncata simulacra deum, L.: Truncat olus foliis, i. e. strips off the leaves, O.
    * * *
    truncare, truncavi, truncatus V
    maim, mutilate; strip of branches, foliage; cut off

    Latin-English dictionary > truncō

  • 73 تقدد

    تَقَدّدَ: قُطِعَ بِالطّول
    to be slit, cut lengthwise, cut into long narrow strips

    Arabic-English new dictionary > تقدد

  • 74 قدد

    قَدّدَ: قَطَعَ بِالطّول
    to slit, cut lengthwise, cut into long narrow strips

    Arabic-English new dictionary > قدد

  • 75 مقدد

    مُقَدّد: مَقْطُوعٌ بِالطّول
    slit, cut lengthwise, cut into long narrow strips

    Arabic-English new dictionary > مقدد

  • 76 kroić kr·oić

    -oję, -oisz; impf -ój
    vt
    1) pf u- (na kawałki) to cut
    2) pf s- (ubranie) to tailor

    kroić (pokroić pf) coś w kostkę/w paski — to dice sth/cut sth in strips

    Nowy słownik polsko-angielski > kroić kr·oić

  • 77 shred

       To cut food into thin strips. This can be done by hand or by using a grater or food processor. Cooked meat can be shredded by pulling it apart with two forks.
       To cut or tear in small, long, narrow pieces.

    Italiano-Inglese Cucina internazionale > shred

  • 78 segmentum

    segmentum, i, n. [seco], a cutting, cut; a piece cut off, a slice (not ante-Aug.; mostly in the plur.; syn.: fragmentum, frustum).
    I.
    In gen.:

    crassior harena laxioribus segmentis terit et plus erodit marmoris,

    Plin. 36, 6, 9, § 53; so,

    segmenta percae,

    Aus. Idyll. 10, 118.—
    II.
    In partic.
    A.
    A strip, zone, segment of the earth:

    plura sunt haec segmenta mundi, quae nostri circulos appellavere, Graeci parallelos,

    Plin. 6, 34, 39, § 212:

    quinto continentur segmento Bactra, Iberia, Armenia, etc.,

    id. 6, 34, 39, § 216.—
    B.
    In plur., strips of tinsel, brocade, etc., sewed around the bottom of a woman's dress; trimmings, bands, flounces, purfles, Ov. A. A. 3, 169:

    segmenta et longos habitus et flammea sumit,

    Juv. 2, 124:

    aurea,

    Val. Max. 5, 2, 1: crepitantia, Sed. Ep. 8, 6 med.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > segmentum

  • 79 trunco

    trunco, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. [2. truncus], to maim, mutilate, mangle, or shorten by cutting off, to cut off (mostly poet. and in post-Aug. prose;

    syn.: mutilo, amputo): truncata simulacra deum,

    Liv. 31, 30, 7:

    statuis regis truncatis,

    id. 31, 23, 10:

    truncat olus foliis,

    strips, cuts off the leaves, Ov. M. 8, 647:

    truncato ex vulneribus corpore,

    Tac. A. 1, 17; cf. id. H. 3, 33:

    truncatā corporis parte, partem corporis,

    Just. 11, 14, 11; 15, 3, 4:

    cadavera,

    Luc. 6, 584:

    caput,

    id. 6, 566: lacertos, Claud. ap. Ruf. 2, 411:

    frontem,

    i. e. to deprive of an eye, Sil. 4, 541:

    manibusque truncatus et armis,

    deprived of his hands and weapons, Claud. B. Get. 88:

    quia antiquum illud (signum) vetustate truncatum est,

    Plin. Ep. 9, 39, 4:

    truncatis arboribus,

    Suet. Calig. 45 init. — Poet., transf.:

    aquas,

    to cut apart, rend asunder, separate, Claud. Gigant. 70:

    heroos tenores gressu,

    i. e. to shorten hexameters into pentameters, Stat. S. 2, 3, 98.—Pregn.:

    cervos,

    i. e. to kill, Val. Fl. 6, 567; Amm. 15, 4, 11. —
    II.
    Trop.:

    tunc omnibus fere membris erat truncata respublica,

    Eum. Pan. Const. Caes. 10.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > trunco

  • 80 chop

    قَطَّعَ \ chop: to cut sth. (meat, wood, etc.) by a blow with an axe or other sharp tool: He chopped the meat before cooking it. He chopped a piece of wood in two. shred: to tear or cut sth. (esp. food, in preparation for cooking) into little strips.

    Arabic-English glossary > chop

См. также в других словарях:

  • cut something to ribbons — cut/​tear etc something to ribbons phrase to cut/​tear etc something very badly The curtains were torn to ribbons. Thesaurus: to tear something, or to be tornsynonym cutting, cuts and relating to cuttinghyponym to destroy or severely damage… …   Useful english dictionary

  • cut to ribbons — ► cut (or tear) to ribbons cut (or tear) into ragged strips. Main Entry: ↑ribbon …   English terms dictionary

  • cut — cut1 W1S1 [kʌt] v past tense and past participle cut present participle cutting ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(reduce)¦ 2¦(divide something with a knife, scissors etc)¦ 3¦(make something shorter with a knife etc)¦ 4¦(remove parts from film etc)¦ 5¦(make a… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • List of Viz comic strips — Following is a list of recurring or notable one off strips from the British adult spoof comic magazine Viz :*Acker Bilk ndash; (See Jimmy Hill). *Aldridge Pryor ndash; a pathological liar whose lies are ludicrous, such as The Nolan Sisters living …   Wikipedia

  • Strata-cut animation — Strata cut animation, also spelled stratcut or straticut, is a form of clay animation, itself one of many forms of stop motion animation.Strata cut animation is most commonly a form of clay animation in which a long bread like loaf of clay,… …   Wikipedia

  • To cut a dido — Dido Di do, n.; pl. {Didos}. A shrewd trick; an antic; a caper. [1913 Webster] {To cut a dido}, to play a trick; to cut a caper; perhaps so called from the trick of Dido, who having bought so much land as a hide would cover, is said to have cut… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • fine-cut — /fuyn kut /, adj. cut into very thin strips (contrasted with rough cut): fine cut tobacco. [1830 40, Amer.] * * * …   Universalium

  • fine-cut — /fuyn kut /, adj. cut into very thin strips (contrasted with rough cut): fine cut tobacco. [1830 40, Amer.] …   Useful english dictionary

  • French-cut — /french kut /, adj. (esp. of string beans) sliced lengthwise into long, thin strips. Also, French style. * * * adj. 1) Cooking sliced obliquely French cut green beans 2) (of women s panties) cut so as to reveal much of the upper thigh …   Useful english dictionary

  • fine-cut — /ˈfaɪn kʌt/ (say fuyn kut) adjective cut into very thin strips …  

  • French-cut — /french kut /, adj. (esp. of string beans) sliced lengthwise into long, thin strips. Also, French style. * * * …   Universalium

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