Search references for WOOL COMBING-MACHINE. Phrases containing WOOL COMBING-MACHINE
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Machine to lay the wool fibers parallel by length
The wool combing machine was invented by Edmund Cartwright, the inventor of the power loom, in Doncaster. The machine was used to arrange and lay parallel
Wool_combing_machine
Multi-spool spinning frame
smashed his machines, forcing him to flee to Nottingham in 1768. This was a centre for the hosiery industry, and knitted silks, cottons and wool. There he
Spinning_jenny
Form of torture using iron combs
prepare wool and other fibres for woolen spinning are used to scrape, tear, and flay the victim's flesh. The tradition that a torturous death by combing with
Combing_(torture)
British inventor and manufacturer (1807–1897)
who is known both for his work in developing the Square Motion wool-combing machine and as a Radical Liberal Member of Parliament. Holden was born in
Isaac_Holden
Method of preparing fiber for spinning
Combing is a method for preparing carded fibre for spinning. Combing aligns fibers in parallel before spinning to produce a smoother, stronger, and more
Combing
Process that disentangles, cleans and intermixes fibres
vegetable teasels were first used to comb the raw wool before technological advances led to the use of machines. The ordered fibres can then be passed
Carding
British inventor (1743–1823)
Fellow of the Royal Society. Cartwright patented a wool combing machine in 1789 and a cordelier (machine for making rope) in 1792. He also designed a steam
Edmund_Cartwright
Fabrics manufactured from worsted yarns
and Romney Marsh. Pasture wool was not carded; instead it was washed, gilled and combed (using heated long-tooth metal combs), oiled and finally spun.
Worsted
Press. p. 51. Retrieved 2024-09-19. Burnley, James (1889). The history of wool and woolcombing. London: S. Low, Marston, Searle and Rivington. Retrieved
List_of_obsolete_occupations
Textile fiber from the hair of sheep or other mammals
shearing Wool bale Canvas work Carding Combing Dyeing Fulling Knitting Spinning Textile manufacturing Weaving Felt Fiber art Tweed Worsted Yarn Wool crepe
Wool
Industry which produces textiles
5 inches is suitable for combing into worsteds. Fibres less than that form short wool and are described as clothing or carding wool, and are best suited for
Textile_manufacturing
Fiber obtained from cashmere goats and other types of goat
popular method is combing. The process takes up to two weeks, but with a trained eye for when the fiber is releasing, it is possible to comb the fibers out
Cashmere_wool
Cartwright patents his first practical power loom and designs a wool combing machine. Andrew Pears introduces Pears soap in London. William Blake's book
1789_in_Great_Britain
Civil parish in Nottinghamshire, England
writer Elizabeth Penrose. He created other inventions such as the wool-combing machine, and was also vicar of Marnham in the 1770s. Jack sold Marnham to
Marnham,_Nottinghamshire
Process by which wool on a sheep is cut off
driven back and forth over the surface of a comb and the wool is cut from the animal. The original machine shears were powered by a fixed hand-crank linked
Sheep_shearing
patents his first practical power loom in England and designs a wool combing machine. William Wouldhave demonstrates a self-righting rescue lifeboat on
1789_in_science
Scoured, combed and sorted raw wool, produced for hand spinning
Wool top is a semi-processed product from raw wool. The process, by hand or machine, prepares the wool for worsted spinning and generally the wool is scoured
Wool_top
Long, narrow bundle of fiber
fibres are less parallel than wool top (which is combed) and are not of uniform length. Carded rovings look fluffier than combed top, which looks smooth and
Roving
Fine subset of cashmere wool
undercoat is collected by combing the goat, not by shearing, as in other fine wools. A traditional producer of pashmina wool in the Ladakh region of the
Pashmina_(material)
Museum in Bradford, England
large comb circle by lifting knives, and deposited into a can ready for removal. The Holden comb was suited for the combing of short staple wools. The
Bradford_Industrial_Museum
Bundle or web of fiber used to spin yarn
Free public-domain fulltext. Spinning Prep/Combing Lab, International Textile Center "gilling". Australian Wool Testing Authority. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
Sliver_(textiles)
Human settlement in England
writer Elizabeth Penrose. He created other inventions such as the wool-combing machine, and was also vicar of Marnham in the 1770s. Jack sold Marnham to
High_Marnham
Soft inner wool of the muskox
distance from the skin. This lends itself to combing the qiviut from the animal in a single large sheet. If not combed, the qiviut will begin to fall out in
Qiviut
Short strands rejected from fiber combing
techniques, such as worsted. The short noil fibers are left over from combing of wool or spinning silk. Noil may be treated as a shorter-staple fiber and
Noil
Long continuous length of interlocked fibres
this was first studied by Galileo. Combed yarns are produced by adding another step of yarn spinning, namely combing, which aligns the fibres and removes
Yarn
Traditional methods of textile production
fibres include cotton, linen, jute and hemp. Animal protein fibres include wool and silk. Artificial fibres (made by industrial processes) include nylon
Textile manufacturing by pre-industrial methods
Textile_manufacturing_by_pre-industrial_methods
Italian luxury fashion house
Pettinatura di Verrone is a combing mill based in the textile district of Biella and specialized in combing superfine wools, cashmere, and vicuña. In 2009
Zegna
Method of yarn production
Inventors, bibliographic references Archived March 13, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Developing A Magnetically Suspended Disc System For Industrial Applications
Magnetic_ring_spinning
Ritual haircare practice
"negation of the negation" but did so in an orderly way by combing it with the kangha (comb), one of the other five Ks. The tradition of keeping hair uncut
Kesh_(Sikhism)
Christian saint and bishop
martyrdom, steel combs. The similarity of these instruments of torture to wool combs led to his adoption as the patron saint of wool combers in particular
Saint_Blaise
Pre-industrial process in making wool fabric
vital in the case of woollens, made from carded wool, but not for worsted materials made from combed wool. After this stage, water was used to rinse out
Fulling
Worker who removes wool from domestic sheep
team that go from property to property shearing sheep and preparing the wool for market. A workday starts at 7:30 am and the day is divided into four
Sheep_shearer
Combing process used to clean and straighten scutched flax or other bast fibers
remain in the heckling comb after the flax has been combed are called tow. If the heckle is fine enough, the tow can be carded like wool and spun, otherwise
Heckling_(flax)
Industrial museum in Devon, England
lowest part of the site, the level 1 combing shed, dealt with the initial cleaning and combing of the unwashed wool. The process involved a number of separate
Coldharbour Mill Working Wool Museum
Coldharbour_Mill_Working_Wool_Museum
18th century planetarium and science museum in Franeker, Friesland, Netherlands
modern astronomy. Other parts on permanent display are Eisinga’s former wool combing establishments and a collection of historical astronomical instruments
Eise_Eisinga_Planetarium
Various fibre-based materials
Revolution, it became increasingly mechanized. In 1765, when a machine for spinning wool or cotton called the spinning jenny was invented in the United
Textile
Method of turning fiber into thread
fibres, which are hard to create when the wool is still in the grease. As machine carders cannot card wool in the grease, pre-carded yarn generally is
Hand_spinning
Textile manufacturing piece
The fiber would then be removed from the doffer by a comb. At first, the card clothing for wool mills was made in the form of sheets, and when attached
Doffing_cylinder
Drafting technique used with long-staple fibers in hand spinning
on the moment. Traditional preparation for short draw spinning is combing, as combing requires the long stapled fibers preferred for the short draw technique
Short_draw
Regenerated cellulose fibre made from dissolving pulp
a machine that compresses the fibre, giving it texture and bulk. The crimped fibre is then carded by mechanical carders, which perform a combing action
Lyocell
Treating objects to look older and used
antiquing techniques can be used: Decoupage Gold leaf and Gilding Graining and combing Texturizing Trompe-l'œil Liver of sulfur Verdigris Wood stain Chalk distressing
Distressing
Welsh poet and soldier
flock and suggests that Guto has in fact stolen the sheep to give to his wool-combing wife in Oswestry, in the process including digs at Guto's baldness. His
Guto'r_Glyn
Pacific Northwest Indigenous textile art form
loose dirt. The wool is then carded, leaving the wool in soft batts, where the fibers lie lengthwise. Taken to the spinning machine, the wool is deftly hand
Coast_Salish_weaving
Region in the northwest of Italy
January 2021. "Who exported Woven fabrics of carded wool in 2018?". "Who exported Woven fabrics of combed wool in 2018?". "Eurostat". Europa (web portal). Archived
Piedmont
Process used in the textile industry
also an explanation for the fact that wool mixed with synthetic fibers is more difficult to set than pure wool. Setting synthetic fibers is only possible
Heatsetting
Textile made from spun flax fibre
fibers are heckled: the short fibers are separated with heckling combs by 'combing' them away, to leave behind only the long, soft flax fibers.[citation
Linen
Imitation velvet fabric
woollen pile on a linen or worsted wool warp and woollen weft, although the ground fabric could be any combination of wool, linen, and silk. Mockado was used
Mockado
Type of rare fabric
name for "sea silk" is ṣūf al-baḥr ("sea wool"). The 9th-century Persian geographer Estakhri notes that a sea-wool robe cost more than 1000 gold pieces and
Sea_silk
Term for a handmade carpet from Iran
The fibers of wool, cotton, and silk are spun either by hand or mechanically by using spinning wheels or industrial spinning machines to produce the
Persian_carpet
Species of flowering plant
textile processing, providing a natural comb for cleaning, aligning and raising the nap on fabrics, particularly wool (i.e. 'fulling'). It differs from the
Dipsacus_fullonum
Early synthetic polymer developed as a textile fiber
the fibres". Fabric blends included mixes like "Bunara" (wool-rabbit-nylon) and "Casmet" (wool-nylon-fur). In Britain, in November 1951, the inaugural
Nylon
British building materials supplier
Vickers. The postwar rise of synthetic textiles sharply reduced the demand for wool and the necessary machinery, and Wolseley diversified activities by buying
Wolseley_UK
Historic site in Queensland, Australia
The mill contained ten carding machines; these large machines broke up the wool and removed impurities. The combing process further organised the woollen
Queensland Woollen Manufacturing Company mill
Queensland_Woollen_Manufacturing_Company_mill
Rural locality in Ingushetia, Russia
Dzheyrakhsky district. Battle tower of Dzheyrakh village. 1921 Woman combing wool on a comb, Dzheyrakh village 1921 Men at work on a wooden tanning drum, Dzheyrakh
Dzheyrakh
Device for spinning thread, yarn, or silk from natural or synthetic fibers
problem in 1738, patenting the Roller Spinning machine and the flyer-and-bobbin system, for drawing wool to a more even thickness. Using two sets of rollers
Spinning_wheel
for quality Welsh woollen products. Wool processing includes removing the fleece by shearing, classing the wool by quality, untangling, carding and spinning
Woollen_industry_in_Wales
Systems for measuring textiles
A fiber, a single filament of natural material, such as cotton, linen or wool, or artificial material such as nylon, polyester, metal or mineral fiber
Units_of_textile_measurement
City in West Yorkshire, England
hardship leading to the introduction of machine-combing. This Industrial Revolution led to rapid growth, with wool imported in vast quantities for the manufacture
Bradford
Machine used to spin cotton and other fibres
The spinning mule is a machine used to spin cotton and other fibres like wool. They were used extensively from the late 18th to the early 20th century
Spinning_mule
Art style of the Coast Salish peoples
characters or family history. Specially designed combs were used during the process of preparing the wool, and another tool pushed the weft during weaving
Coast_Salish_art
staple wool (though nowadays also medium and short fibers are used). The wool is combed so that the fibers lie parallel. woven fabric A woven fabric is a cloth
Glossary of textile manufacturing
Glossary_of_textile_manufacturing
British textile engineer (1718–1803)
by James Hargreaves), a carding machine and the throstle (a machine for the continuous twisting and winding of wool). Thomas Highs, sometimes spelled
Thomas_Highs
Capital of Turkey
long Angora wool, which may be removed by shearing, combing, or plucking (gently pulling loose wool). Angoras are bred mainly for their wool because it
Ankara
Industry related to design, production and distribution of textiles
El Fayum, Egypt at a site which dates to about 5000 BC. In Roman times, wool, linen and leather clothed the European population, and silk, imported along
Textile_industry
2024 studio album by IDK
The album features guest appearances from Gunna, Joey Badass, Conway the Machine, and TheArtist. Production was primarily handled by IDK himself, alongside
Bravado_+_Intimo
Species of arctic land mammal
semi-domesticated for wool, and rarely for meat and milk. The U.S. state of Alaska has several muskoxen farms specifically aimed at wool harvesting. The wool, called
Muskox
Major stream in textile engineering
is preferred for worsted wools as the dye does not have to be wasted on the short fibers that are removed during the combing process. Tow dyeing is dyeing
Wet_process_engineering
textile mill. He set up a one stop shop in which everything the carding and combing of the raw materials to the weaving, fulling, and dyeing of the finished
Dedham_Woolen_Mills
a short mantle. Worker's tunics, when worn, were typically knee length. Wool was common among the working class and even preferred. By the Mamluk period
Egyptian_cultural_dress
Machinery used to spin cotton
(2018), Effects of some parameters of DREF-2 friction spinning machine on properties of wool covered/jute yarn core friction yarns (PDF), Technical University
Cotton-spinning_machinery
Categories of activity prohibited by biblical law on Shabbat
constructive purpose. Combing a wig to set it correctly and pulling out hairs during the procedure with a metal toothed brush or comb would be constructive
39_Melakhot
Australian industrialist and philanthropist (1913 – 2012)
about modernising the company's operations. State-of-the-art British Combing machines were imported, using both the traditional Noble type and the more efficient
Howard_Michell
Fine handwoven cotton fabric of India
madras is woven from a fragile, short-staple cotton fiber that cannot be combed, only carded. This results in bumps known as slubs which are thick spots
Madras_(cloth)
Fabric industry of Germany
involved regulated steps including sorting, combing, washing, spinning, fulling, dyeing, shearing, and pressing the wool. The finished products were inspected
Textile_industry_in_Aachen
pulled and folded dough which is laid in the sun to dry The threads (or wool) of God Sardinia Tagliatelle Ribbons of egg-based pasta. Generally narrower
List_of_pasta
Fine plain weave cloth, originally of linen, now usually of cotton
Lawn cloth or lawn is a fine plain weave textile, made with fine combed cotton. Terms also used include batiste and nainsook. Originally the name applied
Lawn_cloth
Textile and garment manufacturing in Switzerland
transforming fibers into fabric, including preparation of raw materials (washing, combing), yarn manufacturing (spinning, twisting), fabric production (weaving,
Swiss textile and clothing industry
Swiss_textile_and_clothing_industry
Closely woven plain-weave fabric
smooth with no gloss, and washes very well. It is made from both carded and combed yarns, and may be woven of various fibers, such as cotton, polyester, or
Percale
Technique of creating lace or fabric from thread using a hook
bamboo, hemp, cotton, linen, and wool. Since crochet is typically made by hand, although there are crochet machines in the process of being developed
Crochet
Textile artwork created with a needle and yarn on canvas or mesh
century by Bargello and in the 19th century by shaded Berlin wool work in brightly colored wool yarn. Upholstered furniture became fashionable in the 17th
Needlepoint
Type of textile
woven or flat woven without pile, using various materials such as silk, wool, cotton, jute and animal hair. Examples range in size from pillows to large
Oriental_rug
Domesticated form of European rabbit
Angora, and French Angoras are used for commercial wool production. Their long fur is sheared, combed, or plucked (gently pulling loose hairs from the body
Domestic_rabbit
Warp-faced textile
fibers are cleaned and combed into long, cohesive lengths of similar-length fiber, they are spun into yarn using an industrial machine. Throughout the creation
Denim
Hexagonal machine-made net fabric used in lacemaking
There was no carriage, no comb and the operations continued to be done in sequence by the operator. Bobbinet lace machines were invented in 1808 by John
Bobbinet
Informal Western dress code
fabrics, but most commonly from wool, silk or cotton. The two main yarns produce worsteds (where the fibres are combed before spinning to produce a smooth
Suit
Ethnographical museum in Lavra
surrounded by heat and light, people spent the evenings, spinning linen or wool, while listening to songs and telling stories. Sometimes isolated, this home
Museum_of_Lavra_School
Independent fashion brand
raw, textured garments with a neutral color palette, and materials such as wool from West's Wyoming ranch were used. Yeezy Season 9 debuted at Paris Fashion
Yeezy_(brand)
peak lapels, and double breasted suits made from corduroy, paisley brocade, wool blends with wide pinstripes, or crushed velvet in burgundy, teal, black,
1970s_in_fashion
Cotton fabric of fine plain weave
the material and weaving. Ginning: For removing trash and cleaning and combing the fibers and making them parallel ready for spinning a boalee (upper
Muslin
Historic district in Vermont, United States
Mill is a similar design. Worsted is a different thread from woolen using combing rather than carding techniques. The building was similar in design to the
Winooski_Falls_Mill_District
Historical dress of the Han Chinese people
leather and wool clothing of the nomadic people from the Steppe; he argued that the Tanguts had traditionally worn leather-based and wool clothing and
Hanfu
Term commonly used to denote rugs woven in Anatolia
to create contrast. Wool-on-wool (wool pile on wool warp and weft): This is the most traditional type of Anatolian rug. Wool-on-wool carpet weaving dates
Anatolian_rug
Form of textile art, traditionally woven on a vertical loom
Most weavers use a natural warp thread, such as wool, linen, or cotton. The weft threads are usually wool or cotton but may include silk, gold, silver,
Tapestry
Textile with embedded metal
figural motifs (such as people, animals, and objects). One such motif is the comb, which is included as a visual reference to pre-wedding henna nights. People
Tulle_bi_telli
Species of flowering plant
using a stripping knife at the harvesting site. 6. The fibres are then "combed" to separate them. 7. The fibres are then air-dried and bundled together
Abacá
Language of ancient Sumer and Babylon
sipad shepherd udu sheep siki-(a)k-ak-ene wool-GEN-GEN-PL.AN sipad udu siki-(a)k-ak-ene shepherd sheep wool-GEN-GEN-PL.AN "shepherds of woolly sheep"
Sumerian_language
City and non-metropolitan district in Norfolk, England
at their manufactures, dwell in their garrets at their looms, in their combing-shops, so they call them, twisting-mills, and other work-houses; almost
Norwich
Textile tradition indigenous to South America
textiles was spun from indigenous cotton plants, as well as alpaca and llama wool. The earliest known surviving textiles are samples of fiberwork found in
Andean_textiles
List of terms used in biology
Latin Dictionary. Saponaria. Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Flora of North America. Griffith, Chuck (2005). "Dictionary of Botanical
List of Latin and Greek words commonly used in systematic names
List_of_Latin_and_Greek_words_commonly_used_in_systematic_names
Mechanised loom powered by a line shaft
ISBN 9780521458344 Jenkins, Geraint (1972), Geraint Jenkins (ed.), The wool textile industry in Great Britain, London & Boston: Routledge Keegan Paul
Power_loom
WOOL COMBING-MACHINE
WOOL COMBING-MACHINE
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Wool.German : variant of Wolle.Norwegian : spelling variant of Voll.
Surname or Lastname
French and English
French and English : nickname meaning ‘little crow’, ‘raven’, from Old French, Middle English corbin, a diminutive of corb. Compare Corbett.English : possibly also a Norman habitational name from places in Calvados and Orne, France, named Corbon.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Old Norse personal name Kollungr, a derivative of Koli, or from an Old English cognate, Colling, a derivative of Cola (see Cole 2).English : from a pet form of Coll 1.Altered spelling of German Kölling (see Kolling).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Wolf.
Surname or Lastname
English (Yorkshire)
English (Yorkshire) : from a double diminutive of Codd.English (Yorkshire) : from Old French ceur de lion ‘lion heart’, applied as a nickname for a brave man, or ironically for an exceptionally timorous one.
Surname or Lastname
German (Wörl)
German (Wörl) : variant of Wehrle.English : perhaps a habitational name for someone from Worle in Somerset, which is most probably named with Old English wÅr ‘wood grouse’ + lÄ“ah ‘wood’, ‘(woodland) clearing’.
Surname or Lastname
Southern English
Southern English : topographic name for someone who lived near a pool or pond, Middle English pole (Old English pÅl), or a habitational name from any of the places named with this word, as for example Poole in Dorset, South Pool in Devon, and Poole Keynes in Gloucestershire.English : from a medieval variant of the personal name Paul.Jewish (from the Netherlands) and Dutch : ethnic name for someone from Poland.Probably a variant of German Pohl 1, Puhl, or Pfuhl, all topographic names from Middle Low German pÅl, Middle High German pfuol, ‘pool’, ‘pond’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from a diminutive of Middle English cok ‘cock’ (see Cocke).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : metonymic occupational name for a worker in wool, Middle English woll (Old English wull).English : in southwestern England, a topographic name for someone who lived by a spring or stream, from Middle English wolle, wulle ‘spring’, ‘stream’, a western dialect development of Old English (West Saxon) wiell(a).Americanized form of French Houle.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Colling.
Surname or Lastname
Danish
Danish : probably a habitational name from Kolding. This was originally the name of a river, from kaldr ‘cold’ + a derivational suffix -ung, hence ‘the cold river’.English : perhaps a spelling variant of Golding.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Wool merchant, Wool stapler, Wool dealer
Girl/Female
Arabic, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Muslim, Sindhi, Telugu
A Flower
Boy/Male
Indian
Wool merchant, Wool stapler, Wool dealer
Boy/Male
Muslim
Wool merchant, Wool stapler, Wool dealer
Boy/Male
Indian
Wool merchant, Wool stapler, Wool dealer
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Coffin.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from a medieval personal name, originally an Old English patronymic from the personal names Cūl(a) or Cēola. The former may be from a Germanic root kūl ‘swollen’; the latter is a short form of various compound names with the first element cēol ‘ship’.English : habitational name from a place in Kent named Cooling, from the Old English tribal name Cūlingas ‘people of Cūl(a)’.
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : mainly a topographic name for someone who lived in or by a wood or a metonymic occupational name for a woodcutter or forester, from Middle English wode ‘wood’ (Old English wudu).English and Scottish : nickname for a mad, eccentric, or violent person, from Middle English wÅd ‘mad’, ‘frenzied’ (Old English wÄd), as in Adam le Wode, Worcestershire 1221.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Wool.
WOOL COMBING-MACHINE
WOOL COMBING-MACHINE
Girl/Female
Hindu
Desired, ***
Boy/Male
Hindu
Lord Shiva, A name of Lord Rama
Boy/Male
Tamil
Chandramadhav | சஂதà¯à®°à®®à®¾à®¤à®¾à®µ
Sweet
Girl/Female
Australian, French, Indian, Latin
Hail
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
Worthy to Listen
Boy/Male
Tamil
Rasmaru | ரஸà¯à®®à®¾à®°à¯à®‚ Â
Lord Krishna
Boy/Male
Australian, German, Teutonic
Where the Ravens Nest
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
Daughter of Fire
Boy/Male
Biblical
A measure, judging, a garment.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Mighty
WOOL COMBING-MACHINE
WOOL COMBING-MACHINE
WOOL COMBING-MACHINE
WOOL COMBING-MACHINE
WOOL COMBING-MACHINE
n.
Texture; cloth; as, a pall of softest woof.
a.
Approaching; of the future, especially the near future; the next; as, the coming week or year; the coming exhibition.
n.
Alt. of Cymbling
n. pl.
Waste and knots of wool removed by the comb; combings.
v. i.
To combine or contribute with others, as for a commercial, speculative, or gambling transaction.
imp. & p. p.
of Combine
v. i.
To clean the oil from (wood) after combing.
v. i.
To unite by affinity or natural attraction; as, two substances, which will not combine of themselves, may be made to combine by the intervention of a third.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Combine
a.
Doing chance work or add jobs; as, a jobbing carpenter.
a.
Using opportunities of public service for private gain; as, a jobbing politician.
n.
One who, or that which, combines.
v. t.
To supply with wood, or get supplies of wood for; as, to wood a steamboat or a locomotive.
v. t.
To shape, form, or finish with a tool.
n.
The act or process of using a comb or a number of combs; as, the combing of one's hair; the combing of wool.
n.
One who combs; one whose occupation it is to comb wool, flax, etc. Also, a machine for combing wool, flax, etc.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Cool
n.
Approach; advent; manifestation; as, the coming of the train.
p.a.
Adapted to cool and refresh; allaying heat.
n.
A machine for cutting or shaping materials; -- also called machine tool.