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Metric screw thread standard
The Swiss-designed Thury screw thread (alternatively called the Filière Suisse, FS, screw thread) is a metric thread standard that was developed in the
Thury_thread
Set of helical screw threads
Association in 1884 with a thread angle and depth based on the Swiss Thury thread, it was adopted by the Association in 1903. The Thury thread was different in
British Association screw threads
British_Association_screw_threads
Helical structure used to convert between rotational and linear movement or force
Tapered thread Tap and die Thread angle Thread pitch gauge Thread protector Thread-locking fluid Thury thread Burnham, Reuben Wesley (1915). Mathematics
Screw_thread
Angle between flanks of a screw thread
and the Filière Suisse." History and Technology, vol 5, 1988, pp. 68. Thury thread Bhandari, V B (2007), Design of Machine Elements, Tata McGraw-Hill,
Thread_angle
Hardware threading standard
Screw thread Square thread form Thread angle Trapezoidal thread forms Thury thread United States Standard thread Unified Thread Standard (UTS, UNC, UNF
ISO_metric_screw_thread
1333°), which is a smaller angle than the ISO metric thread form but a larger angle than the Thury thread form. The unusual angle was chosen so that the pitch
Löwenherz_thread
American pioneer
Lexington, MA : Silver Burdett & Ginn. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-382-08326-6. Thury 2016, p. 41. Thury 2016, p. 732. Homsher, Deborah (2001). Women & guns : politics
Rebecca_Boone
Sea serpent in Norse mythology
2022. Snorri Sturluson (1916) Gylfaginning ch. xlvi, xlvii, pp. 65, 67. Thury, Eva M.; Devinney, Margaret K. (2017). Introduction to Mythology (4th ed
Jörmungandr
Substance in spiritualism
Gasparin's colleague M. Thury, a professor of natural history at the Academy of Geneva. Between them, de Gasparin and Thury conducted a number of experiments
Ectoplasm_(paranormal)
Instruments used in surveys 1784 to 1853
Observatory at Greenwich; With Remarks on a Memorial of the Late M. Cassini de Thury". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 75: 385–480
Ramsden_surveying_instruments
Navajo creation myth
Bahane', p. 36. Hastiin Tlo'tsi Hee, p. 3. Thury, 2017, pp. 107–108. Zolbrod, 1984, p. 39. Zolbrod, 1984, p. 41. Thury, 2017, p. 108. Zolbrod, 1984, p. 42.
Diné_Bahaneʼ
Former British Army regiment
Saint-Germain d'Ectot ridge on 30 July during Operation Bluecoat; and at Thury-Harcourt on 12 August in the prelude to Operation Tractable. In mid-August
Gloucestershire_Regiment
Decade
Martin Hall of Thompson Township, Geauga County, Ohio, and Paul Héroult of Thury-Harcourt, Normandy independently discover the same inexpensive method for
1880s
Decade
astronomer and botanist (b. 1703) September 4 – César-François Cassini de Thury, French astronomer (b. 1714) September 8 – Ann Lee, American religious leader
1780s
THURY THREAD
THURY THREAD
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Lancashire)
English (mainly Lancashire) : probably a variant of Twiss, or possibly in a few cases from Twist, a minor place in Devon, or Twist Wood in Brede, Sussex, both named from Old English twist, Middle English twist ‘something twisted or forked’.English (mainly Lancashire) : possibly a metonymic occupational name for someone in the cotton-spinning industry, whose responsibility was to combine threads into a strong cord, a sense of twist recorded from the 16th century.
Boy/Male
Danish, German, Swedish
God of Thunder
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Anglo-Norman French gerner ‘granary’ (Old French grenier, from Late Latin granarium, a derivative of granum ‘grain’). It may have been a topographic name for someone who lived near a barn or granary, or a metonymic occupational name for someone in charge of the stores kept in a granary.English : variant of Warner 1, from a central Old French form.English : reduced form of Gardener.South German : from an agent derivative of Middle High German garn ‘thread’; by extension, an occupational name for a fisherman.Altered spelling of Gerner.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English slaye (Old English slege, from slēan ‘to strike’), a metonymic occupational name for a slay maker, an implement used in weaving to push the weft thread tightly against the thread of the preceding pass of the shuttle.English : topographic name from Middle English slay ‘grassy slope’.
Girl/Female
British, English, French, Malay
May
Surname or Lastname
English
English : metonymic occupational name for someone who made string or thread, from Old English twīn ‘thread’, ‘string’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a maker or user of files, from an agent derivative of Middle English file ‘file’.English : occupational name for a spinner, from an agent derivative of Middle English, Old French fil ‘thread’ (Latin filum).English : Americanized spelling of German Feiler, cognate of 1.
Girl/Female
African, American, British, Christian, English, Jamaican
Woven; Twilight; Thread; Early Evening
Surname or Lastname
English (East Midlands)
English (East Midlands) : from the Middle English personal name Thurmond, Old Norse þormundr, composed of the elements þórr, name of the Norse god of thunder (see Thor) + mundr ‘protection’. Reaney and Wilson suggest that, Thurmond having been an uncommon personal name, this surname may also represent the commoner name Thurmod, Thormod with the second element derived from Old Norse móþr ‘mind’, ‘courage’, but assimilated to -mund (a common second element in other compound names).German (Thurmann) : habitational name for someone from a place called Thur (see Thur).German (Thurmann) : occupational name for a watchman, from Middle Low German torn(e)man (torn(e) ‘tower’) or Middle High German turn, turm ‘tower’ + man ‘man’.Respelling of Jewish (from Ukraine) Turman, a nickname from Yiddish turman ‘inconstant man’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the northern Middle English personal name Thurgod (Old Norse þorgautr), composed of the þórr, name of the Norse god of thunder (see Thor) + the ethnic name Gautr (see Joslin).English : nickname from Middle English thur(og)h ‘completely’ + gode ‘good’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : metonymic occupational name for someone who embroidered fine clothes with gold thread, from Middle English thred(en) ‘to thread’ (from Old English þrǣd ‘thread’) + gold ‘gold’.
Girl/Female
Biblical Persian
That drinks, thread.
Girl/Female
Hindu
Thread of brother sister bonding
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English strong, strang ‘strong’, generally a nickname for a strong man but perhaps sometimes applied ironically to a weakling.French : translation of Trahand, a metonymic occupational name for a silkworker who drew out the thread from the cocoons (see Trahan).Translation of Ashkenazic Jewish Stark.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a maker of thread or twine, an agent derivative of Old English twīnen ‘to twine’.
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly East Anglia)
English (mainly East Anglia) : occupational name for someone who made silk thread from raw silk, from an agent derivative of Middle English thrÅw(en) (Old English þrÄwan ‘to twist’). From the 13th century the verb began to be used in its modern sense, including throwing clay in pottery, and so in some cases the surname may have originated as an occupational name for a potter.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Thread of brother sister bonding
Female
Vietnamese
Vietnamese name THUY means "friendly."
Boy/Male
Irish
Strong fort.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Thread of brother sister bonding
THURY THREAD
THURY THREAD
Boy/Male
Tamil
Name of deity in ahobilam
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Helper of the Religion (Islam)
Boy/Male
Indian, Sikh
Gift from God
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Boundary Deity
Girl/Female
Biblical
Fighting, chiding, multiplying.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Traditional
Victor
Boy/Male
Indian
Forever absorbed in God, Ever absorbed in God
Boy/Male
Indian, Tamil, Telugu
Sun
Boy/Male
Indian
An authority of Hadith at baghdad
Boy/Male
Hindu
Idol
THURY THREAD
THURY THREAD
THURY THREAD
THURY THREAD
THURY THREAD
a.
Having the form of a thread; filiform.
a.
Made of thread; as, threaden sails; a threaden fillet.
n.
A hole; an aperture.
a.
Worn to the naked thread; having the nap worn off; threadbare clothes.
a.
Containing, or consisting of, thread.
n.
Same as Thurl, n., 2 (a).
n.
Quality of being thready.
a.
Like thread or filaments; slender; as, the thready roots of a shrub.
v. t.
To pass a thread through the eye of; as, to thread a needle.
n.
A tool or machine for forming a thread on a screw or in a nut.
n.
The ninth month of the year, containing thurty days.
n.
A carangoid fish (Caranx gallus, or C. crinitus) having the anterior rays of the soft dorsal and anal fins prolonged in the form of long threads.
n.
A long adit in a coalpit.
n.
A device for assisting in threading a needle.
n.
The state of being threadbare.
v. t.
To cut through, as a partition between one working and another.
n.
A short communication between adits in a mine.
v. t.
To form a thread, or spiral rib, on or in; as, to thread a screw or nut.
v. t.
To cut through; to pierce.
a.
Fig.: Worn out; as, a threadbare subject; stale topics and threadbare quotations.