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1 loom
♦voorbeelden:1 met lome schreden • with leaden feet, dragging one's feetzich loom bewegen • move heavily/sluggishly -
2 Loom
The machine used for weaving fabrics by interweaving a set of warp threads with the weft which is usually inserted one pick at a time. -
3 loom
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4 loom
لاَحَ \ appear: to come into sight: A figure appeared in the distance. loom: to appear suddenly, like a large shadow, strangely and perhaps dangerously: A big ship loomed up through the mist in front of us. -
5 loom
تَرَاءَى \ appear: to seem: It appears that you are right. loom: to appear suddenly, like a large shadow, strangely and perhaps dangerously: A big ship loomed up through the mist in front of us. seem: to appear to be: He seems (to be) honest. It seems (clear) to me that I ought to go. \ See Also بدا (بَدَا) -
6 loom
adj. slow, languid, slack, torpid, inert, lazy, lethargic, dull -
7 loom
I [luːm] nouna machine in which thread is woven into a fabric.نَول الحِياكَه، مَنْسَج II [luːm] verb( often with up) to appear indistinctly, often threateningly:يَلوحُ بصورةٍ غَيْر واضِحَهA huge ship loomed (up) in the fog.
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8 Loom State
LOOM STATE, or LOOM FINISHEDFabrics in the state they are removed from the loom, before any finishing or after-treatment. They may be sold or shipped in the loom state. -
9 Loom Finished
LOOM STATE, or LOOM FINISHEDFabrics in the state they are removed from the loom, before any finishing or after-treatment. They may be sold or shipped in the loom state. -
10 Loom Dividend
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11 Loom Finished Linen
This term indicates that the cloth has been made of yarns that have been bleached as much as intended prior to weaving, and that no further treatment of that nature is given to the cloth after weaving. The warp yarns are usually bleached half-white or three-quarter white and weft yarns three-quarter or full white and the finishing after weaving is cropping, damping and calendering or mangling before making-up.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Loom Finished Linen
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12 Loom Race
Also known as the shuttle race. -
13 loom door de warmte
loom door de warmteVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > loom door de warmte
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14 Fast Reed Loom
For weaving strong and heavy fabrics, fast reed looms are preferable owing to their greater rigidity at the point of beat-up. In a fast reed loom when the shuttle fails to reach its box the loom instantly stops by the impact of a metal blade upon the frog. The shock is a great strain upon many parts of the loom. Such cloths as ducks, sheetings, fustians, velvets, sailcoths, etc., are woven with fast reeds. -
15 Hautelisse Loom (Vertical Loom)
A special loom built for the making of Turkey and Smyrna carpets and rugs. The warp is arranged vertically. The shafts are horizontal and fastened to two rollers which are turned alternately to the right or left, to move the shafts and open the shed. The pile is made by tying short lengths around two warp threads in the required colours for the design. The ground fabric is made by inserting two picks of strong yarn between each horizontal row of tufts. A comb is used to beat up. This method of tying the pile in tufts is costly.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Hautelisse Loom (Vertical Loom)
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16 Circular Box Loom
A check loom equipped with multiple shuttle boxes (usually six) at one or both sides of the loom and mounted in a cylinder which is adapted to rotate both clockwise and anti-clockwise to bring any required shuttle in line with the shuttle race. -
17 Dandy Loom
The loom used previous to the invention of the power loom and was invented by William Radcliffe. -
18 Navajo Loom
The upright or vertical loom used by the Navajo Indians in the weaving of their famous rugs or blankets. In this loom the warp threads are held in an upright position by fastening them to two wood beams one at the top and one at the bottom - The top beam being fixed to a tree. The alternate warp threads are fastened to a stick so that they can be divided to form a shed for the weft threads. -
19 Barrel Loom
Same as circular box loom; a term mostly heard in weaving sheds. -
20 Bastard Loom
A term sometimes applied to a plain loom provided with two shuttle boxes at one side and a single box at the other.
См. также в других словарях:
LOOM — Entwickler: LucasArts Verleger: Softgold Publikation: 1990 Pla … Deutsch Wikipedia
Loom — Éditeur Lucasfilm Games Développeur Lucasfilm Games Concepteur Brian Moriarty … Wikipédia en Français
Loom — Desarrolladora(s) LucasFilm Games Distribuidora(s) LucasFilm Games Diseñador(es) Brian Moriarty Plataforma(s) … Wikipedia Español
LOOM — Разработчик Lucasfilm Games Издатель … Википедия
Loom — (das englische Wort bedeutet Webstuhl) steht für: Loom (Computerspiel), ein Spiel von LucasFilm Games (1990) Loom (West Virginia), ein Ort in der USA Power Loom (engl. dampfkraftbetriebene Webmaschine), teilw. auch allgemein Webmaschine Loom… … Deutsch Wikipedia
loom — loom; loom·ery; wark·loom; heir·loom; … English syllables
Loom — (l[=oo]m), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Loomed} (l[=oo]md); p. pr. & vb. n. {Looming}.] [OE. lumen to shine, Icel. ljoma; akin to AS. le[ o]ma light, and E. light; or cf. OF. lumer to shine, L. luminare to illumine, lumen light; akin to E. light.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Loom — (l[=oo]m), n. [OE. lome, AS. gel[=o]ma utensil, implement.] [1913 Webster] 1. A frame or machine of wood or other material, in which a weaver forms cloth out of thread; a machine for interweaving yarn or threads into a fabric, as in knitting or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
loom — UK US /luːm/ verb [I] ► if an unpleasant event looms, it will probably happen and makes people worry: »Stocks of heating oil are at their lowest levels for years, and another crisis may be looming. »The company is in serious financial trouble,… … Financial and business terms
Loom — (l[=oo]m), n. (Zo[ o]l.) See {Loon}, the bird. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Loom — Loom, n. The state of looming; esp., an unnatural and indistinct appearance of elevation or enlargement of anything, as of land or of a ship, seen by one at sea. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English