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  • 121 Healds

    This is a term applied to looped cords which are furnished with an eye in the centre and employed in looms for controlling the up and down movements of the warp threads. In the majority of cases there is a separate heald eye for each warp thread, and those healds which lift in the same manner are threaded on the same stave except in those cases where that would make the healds too crowded. In such cases the healds are divided on two or three shafts which may be tied together to lift as one if weaving conditions permit. Healds are formed by a knitting machine which is set to form the required number of heald eyes per inch on each stave, or in the case of spaced healds with the heald eyes arranged in the desired order on the stave. The yarns used may be cotton or worsted (see Hea'd Yarns). In knitted healds the eye is usually formed from the same yarn as the rest of the heald, but healds can be made with metal eyes. Metal healds are made of twisted wire galvanised or treated to be rustless, and formed with an eye in the centre for the warp thread and elongated upper and lower eyes for threading on flat steel bars that are secured to the heald staves proper at the top and bottom. Such healds are usually of the sliding type and eliminate the need for healds knit to pattern. Wire healds are also combined with knitting to give a prescribed number of eyes per inch.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Healds

  • 122 Milanese

    A warp loom knit fabric, made on the Milanese loom, usually from silk or rayon yarns and very fine structure. The looms are constructed with as many as 30 needles per inch and as there are two stitches on each needle this gives 60 loops in one inch of fabric. The fabric is practically ladder proof owing to the double stitches on each needle, thus if one thread breaks, the second thread holds the texture. The fabric is so fine in its mesh that very little surface is given for fracture. The machine is built from 120-in. to 168-in. wide.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Milanese

  • 123 Point

    The French term for the various stitches they employ in the making of real lace and embroideries. ———————— The three lines of decorative stitching applied to the back of a glove. ———————— A term denoting hand-made lace. There are numerous laces to which the name is given, such as Point de Croix, Point d'Alencon. The latter part of the full term relates to the town or district or some special feature of handiwork. There are at least 200 varieties of point lace. The term should only be applied to denote laces made by the needle with a single line of thread, but today many kinds of pillow and machine-made laces are sold as point.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Point

  • 124 Pointing

    The operation in which points are put on gloves. This is usually done by machine, but for expensive gloves may be done by hand.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Pointing

  • 125 Two-Plex Rib

    TWO-PLEX RIB, or DOUBLE RIB
    Warp knit fabric made on a two-needle bed machine which gives heavy weight fabric, thus making pasting for duplex weights unnecessary.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Two-Plex Rib

  • 126 εὔλυτος

    εὔλῠτ-ος, ον, ([etym.] λύω)
    A easy to untie or loose, X.Cyn.6.12;

    ὑποδέσεις D.S.15.44

    ; loose,

    θύραι στροφὰς ἔχουσαι εὐ. Id.3.22

    .
    2 easy to relax, relaxed,

    διαχωρήσιες Hp.Prog.18

    , cf. Arist.Pr. 876b31.
    3 loosely knit, supple, of joints, Id.Phgn. 809b26 ([comp] Comp.), 811a1; loose, of a machine, Hero Aut.26.3.
    4 soluble, easily dissolved, Dsc.5.159; σπλήν friable, Aret.SD1.14; soft, yielding, of the os uteri, Hp.Mul. 2.115: hence metaph., easily dissolved or broken,

    στέργηθρα E.Hipp. 256

    (anap.); of engagements, X.HG5.2.19; of health, Gal.5.443; of problems, easy to solve, Arist.GA 755b23, Just.Nov.97.6 Intr.
    5 easily released, of the foetus,

    εὐ. πρὸς τὸν τόκον Hp.Septim.4

    ([comp] Comp.): so metaph.,

    στόμα εὔ. πρὸς λοιδορίαν Thphr.Char.6.10

    .
    b free from burdens, at ease, Jul.Caes. 315b.
    II Adv. - τως easily, freely,

    οὖρα οὐκ εὐ. ἰόντα Hp.Coac. 446

    ;

    εὐ. στρέφεσθαι Hero Aut.18.1

    ;

    εὐ. [πέλτην] μεταφέρειν D.S.5.34

    ; loosely,

    ἐναγκυλίζεσθαι Plb.27.11.5

    .

    Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > εὔλυτος

См. также в других словарях:

  • knit´ter — knit «niht», verb, knit|ted or knit, knit|ting, noun. –v.t. 1. to make (cloth or an article of clothing) by looping yarn or thread together with long needles: »She is knitting a sweater …   Useful english dictionary

  • knit — [nit] vt. knitted or knit, knitting [ME knitten < OE cnyttan (akin to Ger knütten, to tie (fishing) nets) < base of cnotta, KNOT1] 1. to make (cloth or a garment) by interconnecting loops of yarn or thread in rows of stitches by means of a… …   English World dictionary

  • knit — ► VERB (knitting; past and past part. knitted or (especially in sense 3) knit) 1) make by interlocking loops of yarn with knitting needles or on a machine. 2) make (a plain stitch) in knitting. 3) unite or join together. 4) tighten (one s… …   English terms dictionary

  • knit — [[t]nɪ̱t[/t]] knits, knitting, knitted (The past tense can be either knit or knitted for meaning 4.) 1) VERB If you knit something, especially an article of clothing, you make it from wool or a similar thread by using two knitting needles or a… …   English dictionary

  • knit — [[t]nɪt[/t]] v. knit•ted knit, knit•ting, 1) tex clo to make (a garment, fabric, etc.) by interlocking loops of yarn by hand with knitting needles or by machine 2) to join closely and firmly, as members or parts 3) to contract into folds or… …   From formal English to slang

  • knit — [c]/nɪt / (say nit) verb (knitted or knit, knitting) –verb (t) 1. to make (a garment, fabric, etc.) by interlacing loops of yarn either by hand with knitting needles or by machine. 2. to join closely and firmly together, as members or parts. 3.… …  

  • knit — v. & n. v. (knitting; past and past part. knitted or (esp. in senses 2 4) knit) 1 tr. (also absol.) a make (a garment, blanket, etc.) by interlocking loops of esp. wool with knitting needles. b make (a garment etc.) with a knitting machine. c… …   Useful english dictionary

  • knit — knittable, adj. knitter, n. /nit/, v., knitted or knit, knitting, n. v.t. 1. to make (a garment, fabric, etc.) by interlocking loops of one or more yarns either by hand with knitting needles or by machine. 2. to join closely and firmly, as… …   Universalium

  • knit — verb (knits, knitting; past and past participle knitted or (especially in sense 2) knit) 1》 make by interlocking loops of yarn with knitting needles or on a machine.     ↘make (a plain stitch) in knitting. 2》 unite or cause to unite.     ↘(of… …   English new terms dictionary

  • knit — verb /ˈnɪt/ a) and To turn thread or yarn into a piece of fabric by forming loops that are pulled through each other. This can be done by hand with needles or by machine. The first generation knitted to order, the second still knits for its own… …   Wiktionary

  • knit goods — noun plural 1. : knitted fabrics; especially : fabrics made on a knitting machine and used for underwear, hosiery, and other clothing 2. : articles made from such fabrics : knitted garments …   Useful english dictionary

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