When reinstalling your wheels, adjusting the bolts properly is important to a good spinning wheel. |
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Children's games include kite-flying, spinning tops, yo-yos, and hobbyhorses. |
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In the textile industry much spinning was for long done by peasant-women at home with their spinning-wheels. |
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Now imagine the piece of wood in the diagram spinning in the direction of the arrows. |
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He opened the door and leapt out while the rotors were still spinning and brushed off his clothes. |
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The floor was littered with baskets of differently-colored yarn and thread, and a few spinning wheels stood near the far end of the chamber. |
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While most cars are spinning practice laps at Daytona International Speedway, Jeff Gordon's No.24 Chevy sits on jacks in its garage stall. |
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Audrey wasn't sure if the sudden spinning feeling that washed over her was one of relief of regret. |
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The tradition of Gaelic work songs developed as rhythmic accompaniment to such tasks as milking, harvesting, spinning, and weaving. |
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Household demonstrations include wool carding and spinning, quilting and needlework, soap making and baking in the outdoor clay oven. |
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As his plane plunges into freefall, spinning helplessly in jet stream like a poohstick in an eddy. |
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Standard boat rod guides or spinning guides are simply repolished with jeweller's rouge across all surfaces inside and out. |
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That poor wooden couple lingering around the doorways of the weather house are spinning around like maniacs. |
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Ducking, spinning, banking and weaving, they were putting up a splendid bulletless dogfight. |
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Six families were evacuated from their homes as the blaze destroyed a spinning room and warehouse full of acrylic fibres. |
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Absentmindedly, Clara takes off her wedding ring and plays with it, spinning it around. |
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She looked absolutely radiant with joy in her period dress, spinning and twirling on the floor. |
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Dimples on spinning golf balls reduce air resistance and increase lift by creating turbulence in the air flowing past the balls. |
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She pulled her lighter from her pocket, spinning it in her fingers almost joyfully. |
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The scene is usually uninhabited but spinning wheels, Windsor chairs, rag rugs, and other icons of the colonial revival suggest a human presence. |
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The smell of fish sauce sent my head spinning so I was trying to find Italian food instead in Bangkok. |
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I peered into the jukebox's window, squinting and spinning my head with the record in an attempt to read the label. |
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With that in mind, rather than pining for the good old days and spinning the roulette wheel, maybe the solution is to get in the game. |
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Michael Moran from Cross won 170 euros spinning the wheel in the Shrule-Glencorrib lotto in the Blackriver Inn last weekend. |
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Thus Dreyfuss gave us his character, an ordinary man caught up in wheels of justice spinning out of control, a simple, understated dignity. |
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All of this has left Black West Palm Beach spinning, whipsawed between runaway private development and an enduring legacy of political neglect. |
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But her words fell upon deaf ears, Tane was moving, spinning, whirling around with tears in his eyes. |
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It seemed as though her body was dissolving, and as the potency rose, that her mind was whirling, spinning free of her. |
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One company really took it to the next level by introducing spinning rims to the aftermarket world. |
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To increase his income, he kept sheep and cows, did spinning and acted as a labourer when other farmers needed help. |
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The band were solid but Leyton's constant microphone spinning and hardcore delivery really took away from that. |
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Twisting and spinning up and down the rope, he whooshed a few feet above the audience's heads. |
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It is a neutron star spinning just under 100 times per second and emitting regular radio pulses like a lighthouse beam. |
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The big Canadian cut inside and, with a typically scrappy attempt, sent a deflected shot spinning wide of the left-hand post. |
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Donna winced in pain, and spinning round, kicked out at Mark's stomach, momentarily winding him. |
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Out of the hairpins the H1 is perfectly happy at 45 degrees, with half a turn of opposite lock and the rear wheels spinning up a treat. |
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There is a bar, Chinese lanterns, and a hired disc jockey spinning popular records. |
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The girls stopped spinning and began chasing each other in an impromptu game of freeze tag. |
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Jute is now the wonder fabric that can spin gold for innovative weavers who have invested in the appropriate spinning machinery. |
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A member of the Masonic Lodge in Palmer, Massachusettes, Klingler enjoyed woodcarving, photography, fishing, and spinning yarns. |
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The first water-powered cotton spinning mills typically expanded production by putting out yarn to be woven by members of farming families. |
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At first it had seemed such a good idea, to sit at the spinning wheel and spin the soft cream wool of her Jacob's sheep into fine woollen thread. |
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We had a great time stalking redfish in two feet of water with fly or spinning rod, both methods worked for us. |
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The spinning reels of the tapes, so carefully observed, are further spinning wheels in Harry's circular downfall. |
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No matter what you're talking about, the spinning red VRML cube has the patience to sit by and listen with an open ear. |
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The use of a baitcasting tackle requires more skill than using spinning gear. |
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I sat up right away, to find Luca sitting across the room from me spinning a sai like weapon. |
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When spinning, plug or bait fishing the weight of the lure or bait will take the line out. |
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Sedna is rotating much more rapidly than originally believed, spinning once on its axis every 10 hours. |
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The larger the group gets the more emphasis you must place on moving yourself and spinning and maneuvering others away from you. |
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To that end he offers a structured argument whose central metaphor or image is the spinning well that lies at the heart of Mande tradition. |
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As the moon orbits the spinning earth, there is a cycle of two high tides and two low tides about every 25 hours. |
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This is not unlike getting wheels stuck in mud, and spinning them until the rut is deeper. |
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The initial twelve-minute aerial dance found them on a rope suspended from the ceiling, executing arabesques while spinning with sublime grace. |
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One was a rousing version of a polka that would set us all aswirl, spinning giddy circles until we crashed into each other. |
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This almost certainly indicates that Sedna is spinning, completing a revolution every 20 days. |
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Most millisecond pulsars hover around the 300 revolutions per second mark, and the fastest spinning pulsar ever detected clocked in at 641 rps. |
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The ball cannoned off the keeper on to the post before spinning agonisingly over the line. |
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The anticyclones are spinning in different directions, such that they keep a delicate balance with one another. |
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Slowly, but undeniably, the pendulum starts to change direction, until it is spinning round in an anticlockwise direction. |
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Another jagged block had hooked an engine, tearing it from the wing, rupturing the wing's fuel tank and spinning the entire plane around. |
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My head's still spinning and I don't want to make myself look daft so I'm keeping schtum. |
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In last month's crash a spinning car brought a telegraph pole and live power cables crashing onto nearby homes. |
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Maybe it is my old spinning days, but I just feel comfortable with my dominant hand holding the rod leaving the left hand for the retrieve. |
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Taekwondo is a modern martial art form characterised by its fast, high and spinning kicks. |
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The spinning protons in the hydrogen nuclei act like tiny magnets and align their spins with or against the magnetic field. |
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They set up their looms and spinning wheels in a back-to-the-future type stunt to raise awareness of their crafts. |
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Does the thought of investing in the wireless or telecom industry now leave your head spinning? |
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And all those passing bandwagons, wheels spinning and drivers hissing, have given William something to hop on. |
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A spinning superconductor acts like a very weak magnet, with the poles of the magnet precisely aligned with the axis of the spin. |
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In the macho world of grown-up schoolboy car freaks, no fate is worse than that of spinning a car in front of your peers. |
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I pulled up everything I could find on the laptop pertaining to weaving, textiles, looms and spinning. |
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He took another step forward and she shot to her feet, spinning quickly and lunging for the door. |
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Each player places a coin in the pot and then take turns spinning the teetotum following the instructions when the teetotum stops spinning. |
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Gyroscopes create their own force through spinning, thereby resisting the effects of gravity. |
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They made shoes, they cooked, and they did spinning, sewing and embroidery together. |
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Our bikes would lie like lazy dragons on their sides behind us, with their front wheels poking into the air, spinning. |
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A flying, spinning backhand strike, is a good example of a high risk, low benefit technique. |
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Once the clutch is dis-engaged, the layshaft will just slow down and eventually stop spinning all together. |
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Entire families worked together, weaving their magic on spinning wheels and looms. |
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By the eve of the Revolution, eighty to ninety percent of rural households owned spinning wheels, and almost half owned looms. |
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Women prepared and preserved food, made medicines, and used spinning wheels, looms, and needles to turn wool and flax into clothing. |
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Also, my laptop battery lasts longer when it's not spinning the DVD drive for two hours. |
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The ancients knew the art of spinning amianthus and weaving it into incombustible cloth in which the corpses of important people were burned. |
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Downstairs were the looms and the spinning wheels, the floor covered in scraps of cloth and piles of wool. |
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In one case, workers reported that they'd performed some routine maintenance on the spinning machine that made the housing for fans. |
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This series features the usual staples of magic, including card tricks, the spinning rings, and the cup and balls. |
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He tapped the button on the arrow and the barbed head started spinning. |
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It's got a photo-sensing thing, and as the acetate is spinning, the photo-sensing thing is getting those squiggly lines and interpreting them as sound. |
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Then, of all things, she'd taken up spinning and needlework and all those feminine accomplishments she'd always scorned in favor of roping and riding. |
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Thirty years ago, activities such as high and low impact step-aerobics, spinning, body-pump, hip-hop, funk, tae-bo and roller-blading classes didn't exist. |
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This business of spinning into outer space is just so juvenile and naive that one has to wonder why these booklets didn't burst into flames on the printing press. |
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He's dazzling, fielding questions, spinning out anecdotes and limericks, sounding 35 and hungry for publicity. |
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That distant whirring sound you hear is a long-dead Greek physician spinning in his grave. |
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The roof of the former four-storey spinning mill, which faces the railway line, is being stripped and re-covered in Welsh slate to stop it leaking in bad weather. |
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Every time you pick up the phone, go shopping, do your banking, use the Internet, or watch a movie, you're spinning the wheels of trade in services. |
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A spider crawled across the wall, spinning its web in the doorframe. |
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If the rear wheels are spinning faster than the front ones, the car is suffering wheelspin, which costs valuable time, and also has the side-effect of damaging the tyres. |
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Although these hobby weavers were using acrylic yarns, their skills caught the eye of expert weaver Rachel Brown when she came to the area to teach a spinning class. |
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They sashay along the red carpet, botox-smooth and silicone-enhanced, so blatantly vain and unabashedly full of themselves, spinning for scores of photographers. |
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The use of the spinning was to dodge the ricochets of Richard's blasts. |
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The Embioptera are called web-spinners because they are very good at spinning webs from the silk secreted by glands in the tarsi of their forelegs. |
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The powerful forces of gravity and magnetism channel matter into huge flattened spinning platters known as accretion disks. |
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We know the Earth is spinning because we see the stars go round. |
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Within seconds, the mighty radial roared to life, spinning the propeller. |
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At a time when rural unemployment is high, weavers of fine khadi in Andhra Pradesh are turning away from traditional weaving and spinning, all for lack of proper support. |
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More than menorah lighting and dreidel spinning, Hanukkah is known for its culinary delicacy, latkes. |
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That is, if archeology could let it stand without spinning the hard facts to fit an ambitious pre-conceived political agenda. |
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Aries Coming out of an info-gathering phase, you must put down emotional roots lest you get lost in spinning thoughts. |
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These include tag, hide-and-seek, kite-flying, marbles, and spinning tops. |
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Every crunching tackle was cheered, every spinning pass applauded. |
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The robot smoothly activated, lights gradually blinking on, the rising hum of servomotors spinning up to speed, relays switching to new configurations. |
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The gorgeous rota looks like an alien lighthouse, with silvery lights spinning out of its core. |
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All cocktails are on offer too and after 11 pm the house DJs takes to spinning cool sounds to the late-night lounge lizards who might have just wandered in. |
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This new nightspot throws its first New Year's party this year with DJs Baby Boy and Rico spinning the hottest salsa, merengue, bachata, reggaeton and more. |
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The Doll's House is furnished like a bright children's nursery, with colourful walls and shelves brimming with old annuals, teddies and spinning tops. |
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The Bush White House staff has begun the Augean task of spinning the Bush legacy. |
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With the introduction of khadi and the spinning wheel by Gandhiji, there was a big turnabout in the financial affairs of the British eventually leading to their downfall. |
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Ann Kemp left Lancashire in the mid-1980s to farm on Islay, hand shearing her own rare breed sheep, spinning their wool into yarn, dyeing it with natural dyes and knitting it. |
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The billions of snippets of sadness and bewilderment spinning across the Net confirm who this amazing boy was to all of us. |
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Then it shut down all the thrusters on the starboard side, leaving the 24-foot Deepsea Challenger spinning in a circle. |
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There'll always be a huge demand here for raw wool from Australia, provided we can keep the spindles here spinning wool and keep them away from spinning synthetics. |
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But for users of HBO GO Sunday night, it was more like a spinning wheel of death. |
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That said, the possibility of Russia spinning the whole world into recession is really remote. |
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Men combined agriculture with seasonal migrant work, charcoal burning, woodcutting, and peddling, while women took up wet-nursing, spinning, and weaving. |
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Sudden changes of spinning speed can cause severe damage to the centrifuge. |
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Marton diverted his attention by spinning amusing stories until he fell asleep, just as Scheherazade did. |
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Goodwick DJ, Eugene French, spun discs between bands, but most of the spinning came from Circus Malarky, who cartwheeled, juggled and unicycled their way through the night. |
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Christine lunged at Denton again, the Master backhanding her to send her precariously near the edge of the roof, her head spinning from the force of the blow. |
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It moved past them at a walking pace, with an odd, irregular bob and swerve like a spinning top. |
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The Centennial Exposition of 1876 in Philadelphia also exhibited a New England kitchen furnished with a mix of old tables, cradles, Windsor chairs, and a spinning wheel. |
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Aarti, one half of dynamic female duo Pretty Ugly, admits that her introduction to the world of spinning tunes wasn't text book. |
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There is more and more and more on this ball in this void spinning in this baking heat all encompassed in aglets of time. |
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After setting fire to some wire wool in a special cage, Paul and friend Natalie Sleeman set it spinning. |
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It had buttonholes that appeared normal, but on closer inspection sent the viewer spinning down a mindbending Escheresque wormhole. |
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The flywheel works like a dynamic mechanical battery that stores energy kinetically by spinning a mass around an axis. |
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Other displays are home to scorpions, golden web spinning spiders, assassin bugs and a whole host of other venomous creatures. |
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Liquid enters the machine, falls onto the spinning disks, is atomized and flung out into the falling dry material. |
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A spinning body, such as a planet, is most stable when its mass is farthest from its spin axis, or axis of rotation. |
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In the late 18th century cotton spinning became the town's main employment. |
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Me and my two brothers used to play with Beyblades all of the time, battling the spinning tops to see who spun the longest. |
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Sorry I really buay tank my eyes are closing, head spinning I need to sleep haha. |
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Everthing downcame today Anne the world's spinning out and I spec we finally all going to be riding raw. |
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In the off season the women, typically farmers' wives, did the spinning and the men did the weaving. |
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Using the spinning wheel, it took anywhere from four to eight spinners to supply one hand loom weaver. |
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Based on two sets of rollers that travelled at different speeds, it was later used in the first cotton spinning mill. |
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The spinning and weaving processes are very similar between fibres, however. |
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Spinning evolved from twisting the fibres by hand, to using a drop spindle, to using a spinning wheel. |
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Lewis's invention was later developed and improved by Richard Arkwright in his water frame and Samuel Crompton in his spinning mule. |
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The jenny worked in a similar manner to the spinning wheel, by first clamping down on the fibres, then by drawing them out, followed by twisting. |
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The design was partly based on a spinning machine built for Thomas High by clockmaker John Kay, who was hired by Arkwright. |
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Some early spinning and weaving machinery, such as a 40 spindle jenny for about six pounds in 1792, was affordable for cottagers. |
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Somehow, we'd become high-centred on a big boulder at the creek crossing. One back wheel was spinning wildly. |
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The spinning jenny was invented in 1764 in Lancashire by James Hargreaves, a mechanical advance on the spinning wheel. |
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Girls generally received instruction from their mothers in the art of spinning, weaving, and sewing. |
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You realize the sun don't go down it's just an illusion caused by the world spinning round. |
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In addition, the spinning wheel replaced the traditional distaff for spinning wool, tripling production. |
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Cotton spinning and the manufacture of sacking, sailcloth, and cordage were the main occupations. |
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Sir Richard Arkwright, inventor of the spinning frame, was born in the town. |
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Messrs Wright, the bankers of Nottingham, recommended that Richard Arkwright apply to Strutt and Need for finance for his cotton spinning mill. |
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This was followed in Derbyshire by Jedediah Strutt's cotton spinning mills at Belper. |
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The spinning frame is an Industrial Revolution invention for spinning thread or yarn from fibres such as wool or cotton in a mechanized way. |
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Too large to be operated by hand, the spinning frame needed a new source of power. |
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The spinning frames required significant capital but required little skill. |
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Each blade in the blade cylinder forms a helix around the reel axis, and the set of spinning blades describes a cylinder. |
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A rotary mower rotates about a vertical axis with the blade spinning at high speed relying on impact to cut the grass. |
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As a consequence, engines equipped only with this governor were not suitable for operations requiring constant speed, such as cotton spinning. |
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This organization later went through its own changes, spinning off other conventions. |
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In Lancashire before industrialisation, families would work at home spinning thread while scrags of mutton stewed slowly over a low fire. |
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If the ball is spinning counterclockwise, it will curve right from the hitter's point of view and curve left if spinning clockwise. |
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Once in the lead, the BRM was troubled by fading brakes which led to Hill spinning off at Copse Corner. |
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Hawthorn was accused of reversing on the track after spinning and stalling his car on an uphill section. |
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In it he provided a conceptual model for electromagnetic induction, consisting of tiny spinning cells of magnetic flux. |
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He became interested in spinning and carding machinery that turned raw cotton into thread. |
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Arkwright had previously assisted Thomas Highs, who invented the spinning frame. |
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In the late 1980s, the BBC began a process of divestment by spinning off and selling parts of its organisation. |
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Productivity improvement in wool spinning during the Industrial Revolution was significant, but was far less that that of cotton. |
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From 1790 the chief industry in the west of Scotland became textiles, especially the spinning and weaving of cotton. |
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The bones of sheep were found, but there seems to have been little spinning and weaving. |
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Large spinning mills continued to operate in Llangollen in the north throughout the 19th century. |
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The farmers, especially around Llanbrynmair, employed their agricultural labourers in spinning and weaving in the winter months. |
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All species have a dorsal fin to prevent themselves from involuntarily spinning in the water. |
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Spinner sharks charge vertically through the school, spinning on their axes with their mouths open and snapping all around. |
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The earliest systems were mechanical television systems, which used spinning disks with patterns of holes punched into the disc to scan an image. |
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Camera systems used similar spinning discs and required intensely bright illumination of the subject for the light detector to work. |
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The hair was left on the hide because it prevented the craft from spinning and aided in keeping the water out. |
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This tendency has the effect of keeping spinning bodies stably aligned in space. |
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These appear at regular intervals due to the main current spinning off cores of warm water. |
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This can cause spinning of suspended loads, or stretching, kinking, or hockling of the rope itself. |
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These three towns remained the centre of the English silk throwing industry until silk throwing was replaced by silk waste spinning. |
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After about 35 days and 4 moltings, the caterpillars are 10,000 times heavier than when hatched and are ready to begin spinning a cocoon. |
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A straw frame is placed over the tray of caterpillars, and each caterpillar begins spinning a cocoon by moving its head in a pattern. |
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The spinning wheel, introduced to Europe circa 1350, improved the speed of cotton spinning. |
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Fabric also can be made from recycled or recovered cotton that otherwise would be thrown away during the spinning, weaving, or cutting process. |
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The factory system began widespread use somewhat later when cotton spinning was mechanized. |
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Yarn is produced by spinning raw fibres of wool, flax, cotton, hemp, or other materials to produce long strands. |
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As a result, there were over 20,000 spinning jennies in use by the time of his death. |
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With the spinning and weaving process now mechanized, cotton mills cropped up all over the North West of England. |
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A spinning wheel is a device for spinning thread or yarn from natural or synthetic fibres. |
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Spinning machinery, such as the spinning jenny and spinning frame, displaced the spinning wheel during the Industrial Revolution. |
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The Spinning Wheel replaced the earlier method of hand spinning with a spindle. |
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With rotor spinning, the fibers in the roving are separated, thus opened, and then wrapped and twisted as the yarn is drawn out of the rotor cup. |
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The tabletop or floor charkha is one of the oldest known forms of the spinning wheel. |
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With both, the spinning must stop in order to wind the yarn onto the spindle. |
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The double drive wheel is named after its drive band, which goes around the spinning wheel twice. |
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Starting in 1931, the traditional spinning wheel became the primary symbol on the flag of the Provisional Government of Free India. |
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Sun Charkhe Di Mithi Mithi Kook is a Sufi song in the Punjabi language inspired by the traditional spinning wheel. |
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The principle of his rolling spinning process was perfected by John Kay and Thomas Highs and promoted by Richard Arkwright. |
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In preparing wool fibre for spinning, carding is the step that comes after teasing. |
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Small cards, called flick cards, are used to flick the ends of a lock of fibre, or to tease out some strands for spinning off. |
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The first cotton mills were established in the 1740s to house roller spinning machinery invented by Lewis Paul and John Wyatt. |
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The limited companies took control of spinning, while the room and power system was the norm for the weaving sheds. |
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The later mills were on the fringe of the spinning area in Wigan and Stockport, Availability of labour was cited as a reason. |
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Ring spinning technology had successfully replaced the spinning mule, with mills having been converted mules to rings. |
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Modern spinning mills are mainly built around open end spinning techniques using rotors or ring spinning techniques using spindles. |
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A spinning mill opened raw cotton bales and cleaned the cotton in the blowing room. |
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The process required greater levels of light than spinning, and weaving sheds would often be single storey, with overhead north facing lights. |
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But in Lancashire cotton mills, spinning became a male occupation, and the tradition of unions passed into the factory. |
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The design was partly based on a spinning machine built for Thomas Highs by clock maker John Kay, who was hired by Arkwright. |
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The water frame is given to a spinning frame, when water power is used to drive it. |
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The water frame is derived from the use of a water wheel to drive a number of spinning frames. |
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The spinning mule spins textile fibres into yarn by an intermittent process. |
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The spinning jenny allowed a group of eight spindles to be operated together. |
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The spinning jenny was effective and could be operated by hand, but it produced weaker thread that could only be used for the weft part of cloth. |
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Condenser spinning or cotton waste spinning is akin to spinning wool, and the mules are similar. |
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Mules are still in use for spinning woolen and alpaca, and being produced across the world. |
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The spinning inventions were significant in enabling a great expansion to occur in the production of textiles, particularly cotton ones. |
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Home spinning was the occupation of women and girls, but the strength needed to operate a mule caused it to be the activity of men. |
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The spinning jenny was confined to producing cotton weft, it was unable to produce yarn of sufficient quality for the warp. |
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Thomas Highs of Leigh had claimed that he was the true inventor of both these devices and the spinning jenny as well. |
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Carding and spinning could be the only income for that household, or part of it. |
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The weaver organised the carding, spinning and weaving to the master's specification. |
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Though the workers thought this was a threat to their jobs, it was adopted and the pressure was on to speed up carding and spinning. |
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The price of yarn fell, angering the large spinning community in Blackburn. |
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The spinning jenny succeeded because it held more than one ball of yarn, making more yarn in a shorter time and reducing the overall cost. |
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The spinning jenny would not have been such a success if the flying shuttle had not been invented and installed in textile factories. |
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While Manchester became a spinning town, the towns around were weaving towns producing cloth by the putting out system. |
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Cotton is grown throughout the world, harvested, ginned, and prepared for yarn spinning. |
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Pilling is a function of fiber content, spinning method, twist, and fabric construction. |
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It is undisputed that he invented a perpetual carding engine in 1773, and invented an improved double spinning jenny. |
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In 1775 Arkwright patented a variety of machinery that performed all the processes of manufacture, from cleaning to carding to final spinning. |
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They related to a feeder, a filleted cylinder, a roving can, the crank and comb and roller spinning. |
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The original spinning mill they constructed in Nottingham in 1769 was powered by horses, an expense making the operation unprofitable. |
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The tool rest is usually removed during sanding, as it may be unsafe to have the operators hands between it and the spinning wood. |
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Murray made important improvements to the machinery for heckling and spinning flax. |
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Heckling was the preparation of flax for spinning by splitting and straightening the flax fibres. |
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The Italians had been using power spinning since the early 15th century, with a description published by Vittorio Zonca. |
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An undershot water wheel turned by the mill fleam on the west side of the new mill drove the spinning machines. |
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At St Martin in the Fields, children were trained in spinning flax, picking hair and carding wool, before being placed as apprentices. |
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Slater was well trained by Strutt and, by age 21, he had gained a thorough knowledge of the organisation and practice of cotton spinning. |
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They planned to manufacture cloth for sale, with yarn to be spun on spinning wheels, jennies, and frames, using water power. |
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John was a wheelwright who had spent time studying the latest English developments and might well have gained experience of the spinning mule. |
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Manufacturing was based on Richard Arkwright's cotton spinning system, which included carding, drawing, and spinning machines. |
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It built the first integrated spinning and weaving factory in the world at Waltham, Massachusetts, using water power. |
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Most power weaving took place in weaving sheds, in small towns circling Greater Manchester away from the cotton spinning area. |
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The earlier combination mills where spinning and weaving took place in adjacent buildings became rarer. |
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Later women took to weaving, they obtained their thread from the spinning mill, and working as outworkers on a piecework contract. |
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However, the wool is also used for spinning and knitting of clothing, though on a lesser scale to its other uses. |
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The mill continued spinning cotton until around 1940 but then fell into disuse. |
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At its zenith, it was the most productive cotton spinning mill town in the world, producing more cotton than France and Germany combined. |
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Oldham became the world's manufacturing centre for cotton spinning in the second half of the 19th century. |
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However, during the 20th century Rochdale's spinning capacity declined towards an eventual halt. |
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In 1801, Bradford was a rural market town of 6,393 people, where wool spinning and cloth weaving was carried out in local cottages and farms. |
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Bradford Industrial Museum was established in 1974 at Moorside Mills, a spinning mill in Eccleshill. |
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When cloth dealing declined, wool spinning mills using steam power were built by the river. |
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He prised a skep from its stool and held it out, inverted, showing the dirty wreck of combs, with the vile grubs spinning their cocoons. |
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So they went in to where Gudruda sat spinning in the hall, singing as she span. |
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I've been spinning my wheels on this problem all week, with nothing to show for it. |
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He sat in a wheely chair just inside the door, spinning one way and the other, lifting up his knees to spin faster. |
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The yponomeutids, in general, feed on leaf tissues, often spinning silken webs over their host plants and skeletonising the leaves beneath. |
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She also handed out information on 50-pound bags of Type I, Type III, and Type V glass beads processed by Horiba using their spinning riffler. |
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Among attractions were hand-loom weaving, spinning, clog-making, basketwork, tatting and pottery. |
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FyrFlyzO is a revolutionary new spinning toy from Vivid Imaginations that gets you active, while creating unique and amazing light shows. |
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Lead concentrations in the tested items ranged from a low of 0 ppm for a spinning toy top to a high of 428,525 ppm for a saltshaker lid. |
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The Francophobe preppies of yesteryear will be spinning in their graves. |
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Instead, this was a performance laced with the same complacency and inflated self-opinion that sent United spinning out of the Champions League. |
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The DJ pals will be spinning funk, soul, acid jazz, big beat, breakbeats and hip hop tomorrow night. |
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The spinning bottle of Newcy Brown came to a halt on our very own Scouse sexpot Jen. |
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Lithe mountain goats and sheepherders roam the stark land, and locals make a living spinning sheep's hair into woollen carpets. |
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Here's a world where much more energy is expended on spinning gaffes and molding sound bites than creating sound policy. |
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A calm day, but we still ended up spinning through scary tide rips with 2-foot standing waves and sucking whirlpools. |
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The spinnability of PAN solutions is restricted by solvents and the solid content of spinning dope. |
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Mary Beth, a 39-year-old textile worker, felt a pop in her right wrist when she lifted an 8-pound bobbin into a spinning frame. |
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There will be gifts, jewellery, crafts, books, toys, tombolas, bric-a-brac and a spinning jenny. |
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Men who could maintain carding machines and particularly woollen spinning mules were capable of working in many engineering plants. |
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One of the new items is the Casino Roulette Wheel chip-and-dip, complete with a removable spinning top over the center dip section. |
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Volunteers helped out as children made puppets, a spinning top and yo-yo at the War Memorial Park. |
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Once more you think back to the start of this series when Lady Rebecca was barren and whizzing around her box like a spinning top. |
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As used in spinning, weaving, knitting, sewing, or lacemaking, the bobbin provides temporary or permanent storage for yarn and may be made of plastic, metal, bone, or wood. |
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Jackpots are awarded by spinning Loopy Lotto symbols onto the payline. |
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A wealthy man, he eventually owned thirteen spinning mills and had developed tenant farms and company towns around his textile mills, such as Slatersville, Rhode Island. |
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Scavengers were employed in 18th and 19th century in cotton mills, predominantly in the UK and the United States, to clean and recoup the area underneath a spinning mule. |
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Mr. Gannon loaded the racks inside the centrifuge with two beeless honeycombs, then stepped back and let Julian begin spinning them with a hand crank. |
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Because many processes like spinning and weaving, iron rolling, and paper manufacturing were originally powered by water, the term survives as in steel mill, paper mill, etc. |
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In metal spinning, the further pin ascends vertically from the tool rest and serves as a fulcrum against which tools may be levered into the workpiece. |
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During the Industrial Revolution, cast iron was also widely used for frame and other fixed parts of machinery, including spinning and later weaving machines in textile mills. |
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While Hargreaves worked on the spinning jenny, Highs, it is alleged, constructed a machine using rollers, similar to a machine later called the water frame. |
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No mention was made by him of the spinning jenny, but it was mentioned as a statement of fact in Arkwrights submission, that Hargreaves had invented it. |
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Arkwright applied for at least 5 patents relating to spinning. |
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The new study finds that the supernovae are likely powered by the creation of a magnetar, an extraordinarily magnetized neutron star spinning hundreds of times per second. |
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