Nobert's lines

Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

·add. ·- Fine lines ruled on glass in a series of groups of different closeness of line, and used to test the power of a microscope.

Related Words

  • Lines

    Were used for measuring and dividing land; and hence the word came to denote a portion or inheritanc...

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  • lines

    The reins, or that part of the bridle which extends from the horse's head to the hands of the driver...

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  • lines

    With shipwrights, are the various plans for determining the shape and form of the ship's body on the...

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  • Fraunhofer lines

    ·- The lines of the spectrun; especially and properly, the dark lines of the solar spectrum, so call...

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  • Zollner's lines

    ·add. ·- Parallel lines that are made to appear convergent or divergent by means of oblique intersec...

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  • artificial lines

    The ingenious contrivances for representing logarithmic sines and tangents, so useful in navigation,...

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  • bow-lines

    In ship-building, longitudinal curves representing the ship's fore-body cut in a vertical section. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • buttock-lines

    In ship-building, the longitudinal curves at the rounding part of the after body in a vertical secti...

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  • checking-lines

    These are rove through thimbles at the eyes of the top-mast and top-gallant rigging, one end bent to...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • clothes-lines

    A complete system of parallel lines, hoisted between the main and mizen masts twice a week to dry th...

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  • clue-lines

    Are for the same purpose as clue-garnets, only that the latter term is solely appropriated to the co...

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  • continued lines

    In field-works, means a succession of fronts without any interruption, save the necessary passages; ...

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  • crane-lines

    Those which formerly went from the spritsail-topmast to the middle of the fore-stay, serving to stea...

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  • leech-lines

    Ropes fastened to the leeches of the main-sail, fore-sail, and cross-jack, communicating with blocks...

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  • level-lines

    Lines determining the shape of a ship's body horizontally, or square from the middle line of the shi...

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  • life-lines

    Stretched from gun to gun, and about the upper deck in bad weather, to prevent the men being washed ...

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  • slab-lines

    Small ropes passing up abaft a ship's main-sail or fore-sail, led through blocks attached to the tre...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • spider-lines

    A most ingenious substitution of a spider's long threads for wires in micrometer scales, intended fo...

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  • spilling lines

    Ropes contrived to keep the sails from blowing away when they are clued up, being rove before the sa...

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  • yoke-lines

    The ropes by which the boat's steerage is managed. ...

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  • bunt slab-lines

    Reeve through a block on the slings of the yard or under the top, and pass abaft the sail, making fa...

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  • circumvallation, lines of

    Intrenchments thrown up by a besieging army, outside itself, and round the besieged place, but front...

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  • contravallation, lines of

    Continuous lines of intrenchment round the besieged fortress, and fronting towards it, to guard agai...

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  • hammock gant-lines

    Lines extended from the jib-boom end around the ship, triced up to the lower yard-arms, for drying s...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • horizontal ribband lines

    A term given by shipwrights to those lines, or occult ribbands, by which the cant-timbers are laid o...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • lines of flotation

    Those horizontal marks supposed to be described by the surface of the water on the bottom of a ship,...

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  • lucky minie's lines

    The long stems of the sea-plant Chorda filum. ...

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