Cord ( German Schnur ) - a thin twine , braid , wire or rope .
Even thinner is the lace .
Content
Application
- Cord - one of the decorative accessories of a flag , banner or standard .
- Cords with tassels for curtains, curtains.
- Multiple-page documents are sewn with a lace or thick thread, which should be protected from replacing and removing pages: account books, complaints and suggestion books, secret telegram forms, and so on.
- Cord is the string at the carpenters, which beat off the line with chalk or coal; hang up itself (the line) bears the same name, along which they amuse or cut: "Loosen the cord, do not cross the cord."
- The masons have a cord, which is stretched along the wall for direct masonry.
- Lace for shoes.
Cord as a measure of length
When the word "cord" is used in the meaning of a measure of length, we mean a length equal to 23 fathoms (49 m 7 cm). Also used as a measure of area equal to square fathoms (4.55 m 2 ) .
Related words
- String book, behind the cord, laced up.
- Cord hang up - about a dress that is pulled together with laces.
- Lace up a dress, corset, or suitcase: bind and pull together with laces, lace up.
- To lace up the book, to lace up - to pull the cord and print it.
- To lace tobacco (Siberian) - to lower leaves on a rope, it is cord tobacco.
- Lacing up (passive and returnable): "There used to be dandies laced up like young ladies, but now they walk in bags."
- Lacing , lacing - action on the root root verb.
- Lacing than lacing, a corset, or a device like it.
- Stringing (carpentry) - to beat the line with a cord: "String all the boards at once, then go comfortably."
- Lacing, -nica, lacing, -shoe - lacing someone, anything.
See also
- Bikford Cord
- Cable
- Climbing rope
- Staropolskie measures of length
- Shnurov Sergey Vladimirovich (Shnur) - Russian rock musician
Literature
- Cord, measure of length // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.
- Cord, wicker product // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : 86 tons (82 tons and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.