|
PAIL |
Bucket |
|
YOKES |
Bucket-carrying frames |
|
YOKE |
Bucket carrying frame |
|
SPADE |
Bucket and ... |
|
|
DAHL |
Charlie Bucket's creator |
|
BUCKTEETH |
Prominent choppers shook the bucket |
|
REV |
Engine turn will prevail without bucket |
|
DIE |
Kick the bucket of dye, say |
|
|
EDDIED |
Ed kicked the bucket and created a whirlpool |
|
HUDGE |
An iron bucket for hoisting coal or ore. |
|
SOLEPLATE |
The plate forming the back of a waterwheel bucket. |
|
BAIL |
A bucket or scoop used in bailing water out of a boat. |
|
SLUDGER |
A bucket for removing mud from a bored hole; a sand pump. |
|
START |
The curved or inclined front and bottom of a water-wheel
bucket. |
|
SKIP |
An iron bucket, which slides between guides, for hoisting
mineral and rock. |
|
SUCKER |
The embolus, or bucket, of a pump; also, the valve of a
pump basket. |
|
KIBBLE |
A large iron bucket used in Cornwall and Wales for raising
ore out of mines. |
|
SPEAR |
The rod to which the bucket, or plunger, of a pump is
attached; a pump rod. |
|
PLUNGER |
A long solid cylinder, used, instead of a piston or
bucket, as a forcer in pumps. |
|
BOX |
A chamber or section of tube in which a valve works; the
bucket of a lifting pump. |
|
CAGE |
The box, bucket, or inclosed platform of a lift or elevator;
a cagelike structure moving in a shaft. |
|
TUB |
A box or bucket in which coal or ore is sent up a shaft; -- so
called by miners. |
|
BAILER |
A utensil, as a bucket or cup, used in bailing; a machine
for bailing water out of a pit. |
|
CUVETTE |
A pot, bucket, or basin, in which molten plate glass is
carried from the melting pot to the casting table. |
|
VENTILATE |
To provide with a vent, or escape, for air, gas,
etc.; as, to ventilate a mold, or a water-wheel bucket. |