- The rod, perch, or
pole (sometimes also
lug) is a surveyor's tool and unit of
length of
various historical definitions. In
British imperial and US customary...
-
fireplaces used a
chain that hung from
first a
green wooden chimney lug pole then a
fixed iron
pole directly over the fire. The
chimney crane, by contrast, was...
-
sending out its
peculiar music, and the tea
kettle swng from a
wooden '
lug pole' with
myself setting the table, or
turning the meat, or
watching the Jonny...
- The
lug sail, or lugsail, is a fore-and-aft, four-cornered sail that is
suspended from a spar,
called a yard. When raised, the sail area
overlaps the...
- had right-handed
lug nuts on the
right wheels and left-handed
lug nuts on the left wheels, so that, as the
vehicle moved forward, the
lug nuts
tended to...
-
outside the tank.
Pole-mounted
transformers may have
lugs allowing direct mounting to a
pole or may be
mounted on cross-arms
bolted to the
pole.
Aerial transformers...
-
kitchen firebox are
roughly dressed granite.
Cooking pots were hung from a
lug pole.
Above the ridge, the
chimney flue
outside measurements are
forty eight...
-
level and
contains a m****ive
central stone chimney which was
built with
lug poles. It is
believed that the
cellar was used as
slave quarters in the early18th...
- Lashed-
lug boats are
ancient boat-building
techniques of the
Austronesian peoples. It is
characterized by the use of
raised lugs (also
called "cleats")...
-
Middle Low
German word bōchsprēt – bōch
meaning "bow" and sprēt
meaning "
pole". On some square-rigged
ships a
spritsail is
flown below the bowsprit; these...