Word Meanings - TILT-MILL - Book Publishers vocabulary database
A mill where a tilt hammer is used, or where the process of tilting is carried on.
Related words: (words related to TILT-MILL)
- HAMMER LOCK
A hold in which an arm of one contestant is held twisted and bent behind his back by his opponent. - CARRIBOO
See CARIBOU - WHEREIN
1. In which; in which place, thing, time, respect, or the like; -- used relatively. Her clothes wherein she was clad. Chaucer. There are times wherein a man ought to be cautious as well as innocent. Swift. 2. In what; -- used interrogatively. Yet - CARRIABLE
Capable of being carried. - WHEREVER
At or in whatever place; wheresoever. He can not but love virtue wherever it is. Atterbury. - PROCESSIVE
Proceeding; advancing. Because it is language, -- ergo, processive. Coleridge. - HAMMERER
One who works with a hammer. - PROCESSIONALIST
One who goes or marches in a procession. - WHERETO
1. To which; -- used relatively. "Whereto we have already attained." Phil. iii. 16. Whereto all bonds do tie me day by day. Shak. 2. To what; to what end; -- used interrogatively. - WHEREAS
1. Considering that; it being the case that; since; -- used to introduce a preamble which is the basis of declarations, affirmations, commands, requests, or like, that follow. 2. When in fact; while on the contrary; the case being in truth that; - CARRIAGEABLE
Passable by carriages; that can be conveyed in carriages. Ruskin. - WHERE'ER
Wherever; -- a contracted and poetical form. Cowper. - TILTH
1. The state of being tilled, or prepared for a crop; culture; as, land is good tilth. The tilth and rank fertility of its golden youth. De Quincey. 2. That which is tilled; tillage ground. And so by tilth and grange . . . We gained the mother - HAMMER-LESS
Without a visible hammer; -- said of a gun having a cock or striker concealed from sight, and out of the way of an accidental touch. - PROCESSIONARY
Pertaining to a procession; consisting in processions; as, processionary service. Processionary moth , any moth of the genus Cnethocampa, especially C. processionea of Europe, whose larvæ make large webs on oak trees, and go out to feed in regular - WHEREINTO
1. Into which; -- used relatively. Where is that palace whereinto foul things Sometimes intrude not Shak. The brook, whereinto he loved to look. Emerson. 2. Into what; -- used interrogatively. - WHERESOE'ER
Wheresoever. "Wheresoe'er they rove." Milton. - WHERETHROUGH
Through which. "Wherethrough that I may know." Chaucer. Windows . . . wherethrough the sun Delights to peep, to gaze therein on thee. Shak. - HAMMERABLE
Capable of being formed or shaped by a hammer. Sherwood. - WHERESO
Wheresoever. - WHER; WHERE
Whether. Piers Plowman. Men must enquire , Wher she be wise or sober or dronkelewe. Chaucer. - EVERYWHERENESS
Ubiquity; omnipresence. Grew. - EVERYWHERE
In every place; in all places; hence, in every part; throughly; altogether. - ACID PROCESS
That variety of either the Bessemer or the open-hearth process in which the converter or hearth is lined with acid, that is, highly siliceous, material. Opposed to basic process. - GOLD-HAMMER
The yellow-hammer. - BARREL PROCESS
A process of extracting gold or silver by treating the ore in a revolving barrel, or drum, with mercury, chlorine, cyanide solution, or other reagent. - HAMMER
That part of a gunlock which strikes the percussion cap, or firing pin; the cock; formerly, however, a piece of steel covering the pan of a flintlock musket and struck by the flint of the cock to ignite the priming. Also, a person of thing that - SCARRING
A scar; a mark. We find upon the limestone rocks the scarrings of the ancient glacier which brought the bowlder here. Tyndall. - RECARRIAGE
Act of carrying back.