… Throughout the Nomenclature, “wool” means the natural fibre grown by sheep or lambs. Wool fibres are essentially com … wool is normally yellowish. Some, however, is grey, black, brown or russet in colour. (B) Degreased wool, not …
… laid. (5) Match splints which are manufactured by cutting drawn, or more usually, sliced or peeled wood, to the … and forks. (9) Panels consisting of laths of roughly sawn wood, assembled with glue in order to facilitate …
… also includes : (1) Tubes and pipes welded by forging, known as butt‑welded tubes and pipes. (2) Tubes and pipes … in which the edges touch or cover each other and which are known as open seam tubes. However, products having an open …
… raise and lower their warp yarns to form an angle (known as the shed) between the two groups of yarns through … by compressed air or a water jet or by a long needle, or drawn across from a fixed bobbin by a series of projectiles, …
… deposited in the retort extensions as a very fine powder known as zinc dust or blue powder. A modern … * * * Zinc is a bluish‑white metal which can be rolled, drawn, stamped, extruded, etc., at suitable temperatures, …
… parchment paper together while in the wet state, are known as vegetable parchment paperboard. Similar papers may … wallpaper) also falls in this heading. Greaseproof papers (known in certain countries as “imitation parchment paper”) …