Download

How To Use Hatchel In A Sentence

  • From the tow which had been hatchelled out from harl a coarse thread was spun and cloth was woven which was made chiefly into shirts and smocks. Home Life in Colonial Days
  • The crude fibers are combed with hatchels to yield the long spinnable fibers, the short fibers (pluckings or tow) remaining between in the steel teeth of the comb.
  • They then scutched and hatcheled which was mainly to get off the shaff. Then they spun the inner part of the flax on a flax wheel.
  • He is being hatcheled severely by constant telephones' calling.
  • He is being hatcheled severely by constant telephones' calling.
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
Fix common errors and boost your confidence in every sentence.
Get started
for free
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
  • After opening the small cover, you will see two trails, right side and left side, where the hatchels shall be fixed, being toothed or straights.
  • After scutching, the settler would pull the flax through a board of sharp iron nails called a hackle or hatchel (see accompanying photograph) in order to untangle and smooth the threads. News from www.pantagraph.com
  • Horsehair, raw, hatcheled, boiled, dyed, also laid in the form of tresses and spun; bristles; raw bed feathers Free. A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents Volume 9, part 1: Benjamin Harrison
  • In addition to collecting and using my antique spinning wheels and weaving looms, I also have a collection of antique flax hetchels (also known as hatchels).
  • In the low, close room were the hemp was hatcheled, the dust arising from the hatches of twenty men hard at work was sometimes so dense that the windows appeared but indistinctly. Reminiscences of Levi Coffin, the Reputed President of the Underground Railroad; Being a Brief History of the Labors of a Lifetime in Behalf of the Slave, with the Stories of Numerous Fugitives, Who Gained Their Freedom Through His Instrumentality, and Ma
  • So she laid down her hatchel -- but without crossing herself -- and said: Russian Fairy Tales A Choice Collection of Muscovite Folk-lore
  • ` ` Coach Hatchell wanted us to dominate from the beginning, and that's what we did, '' said Larkins, who finished with 14 points, six rebounds, five steals and six assists. USATODAY.com - Women's Basketball - George Washington vs. North Carolina
  • hatchelled" on the sky in minute lines and limnings. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 26, September, 1880
  • Few have ever seen a woman hatchel flax or card tow, or heard the buzzing of the foot-wheel, or seen bunches of flaxen yarn hanging in the kitchen, or linen cloth whitening on the grass. Home Life in Colonial Days
  • There is a period, which occurred between the time of being "hatcheled" and that of being "woven," that it exceeds my powers to delineate. Autobiography of a Pocket-Handkerchief
  • After the flax had been hatcheled, it was in the form of short, broken fibers called tow.
  • Flax was raised, and after grandfather had broken, swingled and hatchelled it, grandmother spun it into thread, which sold for $1.50 per pound.
  • Instead of sowing five pecks to the acre, sow five or more bushels, and you will raise flax as soft as silk; from such flax fibres can be hatcheled as fine as spinster's webs.
  • Flax was raised, and after grandfather had broken, swingled and hatchelled it, grandmother spun it into thread, which sold for $1.50 per pound.
  • She caught rain water from eaves in a wooden trough; she washed, picked, carded and dyed the wool; pulled, broke, hatchelled, and bleached the hemp; spun the thread, and wove the cloth; designed the style, cut and made the garments.
  • Below in the barn black Cæsar sat quietly hatchelling flax, sometimes gurgling and giggling to himself with an overflow of that interior jollity with which he seemed to be always full. Oldtown Fireside Stories
  • ALONIE WALTON, MOTHER OF MISSING WOMAN LISA HATCHELL: Lisa didn ` t have no enemy. CNN Transcript Jan 25, 2008
  • So that afternoon beheld Sam arranged at full length on a pile of top-tow in the barn-chamber, hatchelling by proxy by putting Harry and myself to the service. Oldtown Fireside Stories
  • But as there are few merchants who do not _hatchel_ each other a little, so standing near this merchant you could see he was not free from this feeling, and you would believe, if he had owned our goods and been free to receive payment for them, in such kind of pay, he would have valued them much higher. Journal of Jasper Danckaerts, 1679-1680
  • In this issue we will learn about that often overlooked tool used in flax processing, the hackle, also called a hatchel or a hetchel.
  • Brindle's calf in the woods, or gather oven-wood for his mother to start again the big brick oven with its dozen loaves of rye bread, or see the plow crowding the lingering snow-banks on the side-hill, or help his father break and swingle and hatchel the flax in the barnyard? The Wit of a Duck and Other Papers
  • hatcheled" codfish, or any salt codfish picked into small pieces and freshened in one quart of cold water. Salads, Sandwiches and Chafing-Dish Dainties With Fifty Illustrations of Original Dishes
  • One of these books contained illustrations of a hatchel and described how it was used.
  • Police shot Hatchel Pate Adams III twice with astun-gun - typically a non-lethal weapon - after officers said he went after them with a sword in his home. The Shad Plank
  • Sif real a flax comb or hatchel Sichcal s meafitring bowl or entral Siulbipe Archaeologia Britannica,: Giving Some Account Additional to what Has Been ...
  • I don't wonder you look fagged; the ride through the dust was hard enough without having all sorts of other things to hatchel you. The Wizard's Daughter and Other Stories

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):