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NOG |
Wooden pin |
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PEG |
Wooden pin |
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DOWEL |
Wooden pin |
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NORMAN |
A wooden bar, or iron pin. |
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FID |
A wooden or metal bar or pin, used to support or steady
anything. |
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SPILE |
A small plug or wooden pin, used to stop a vent, as in a
cask. |
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BROACH |
An awl; a bodkin; also, a wooden rod or pin, sharpened at
each end, used by thatchers. |
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WOOLDER |
One of the handles of the top, formed by a wooden pin
passing through it. See 1st Top, 2. |
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TREENAIL |
A long wooden pin used in fastening the planks of a
vessel to the timbers or to each other. |
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BEDSTAFF |
"A wooden pin stuck anciently on the sides of the
bedstead, to hold the clothes from slipping on either side." |
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THOLE |
A wooden or metal pin, set in the gunwale of a boat, to
serve as a fulcrum for the oar in rowing. |
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GUDGEON |
The pin of iron fastened in the end of a wooden shaft or
axle, on which it turns; formerly, any journal, or pivot, or bearing,
as the pintle an... |
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TOGGLE |
A wooden pin tapering toward both ends with a groove around
its middle, fixed transversely in the eye of a rope to be secured to
any other loop... |