Synonyymit & Anagrammeja | englanti sana KNOT
KNOT
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- He was active in the theory of finite groups, knot theory, number theory, combinatorial game theory and coding theory.
- Practical knots are classified by function, including hitches, bends, loop knots, and splices: a hitch fastens a rope to another object; a bend fastens two ends of a rope to each another; a loop knot is any knot creating a loop; and splice denotes any multi-strand knot, including bends and loops.
- The legends told about this Midas and his adopted father Gordias, credited with founding the Phrygian capital city Gordium and tying the Gordian Knot, indicate that they were believed to have lived sometime in the 2nd millennium BC, well before the Trojan War.
- The Sealed Knot was a secret Royalist association which plotted for the Restoration of the Monarchy during the English Interregnum.
- The overhand knot is one of the most fundamental knots, and it forms the basis of many others, including the simple noose, overhand loop, angler's loop, reef knot, fisherman's knot, half hitch, and water knot.
- Called the "granny's knot" with references going back to at least 1849, the knot was so-called because it is "the natural knot tied by women or landsmen".
- A miller's knot (also sack knot or bag knot) is a binding knot used to secure the opening of a sack or bag.
- The butterfly loop, also known as lineman's loop, butterfly knot, alpine butterfly knot and lineman's rider, is a knot used to form a fixed loop in the middle of a rope.
- Simple and secure, it is a harsh knot that can be difficult or impossible to untie once tightened.
- The fisherman's knot is a bend (a knot for joining two lines) with a symmetrical structure consisting of two overhand knots, each tied around the standing part of the other.
- The Savoy knot can also be seen on the Alfa Romeo automobile badge (founded and manufactured in Milan, Italy) up to 1943.
- His intention was to develop a knot that would hold well when the constricted object was cut close to the winds of the knot.
- The knot remains somewhat secure under tension; the coarser the rope the more secure it is (see Disadvantages, below).
- The clove hitch is an ancient type of knot, made of two successive single hitches tied around an object.
- It is uncertain whether the use of the word "club" originated in its meaning of a knot of people, or from the fact that the members "clubbed" together to pay the expenses of their gatherings.
- Knot author Geoffrey Budworth claims the knot can be traced back to the days when carters and hawkers used horse-drawn conveyances to move their wares from place to place.
- Another method intended to result in the mass of the knot crushing closed (occluding) neck arteries, causing cessation of brain circulation, which was not always rapid.
- It is said that sailors would secure their belongings in a ditty bag using the thief knot, often with the ends hidden.
- Interesting developments in the artistic use of interlaced knot patterns are found in Byzantine architecture and book illumination, Coptic art, Celtic art, Islamic art, Kievan Rus' book illumination, Ethiopian art, and European architecture and book illumination.
- On the first of arctic explorer John Ross' expeditions (1818) the Inuit (Eskimos) presented him a sled that contained several of these knots, showing that it is a genuine Inuit knot.
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