How To Use Kiln In A Sentence

  • My poor Lirriper was a handsome figure of a man, with a beaming eye and a voice as mellow as a musical instrument made of honey and steel, but he had ever been a free liver being in the commercial travelling line and travelling what he called a limekiln road — “a dry road, Emma my dear,” my poor Lirriper says to me, “where I have to lay the dust with one drink or another all day long and half the night, and it wears me Emma” — and this led to his running through a good deal and might have run through the turnpike too when that dreadful horse that never would stand still for a single instant set off, but for its being night and the gate shut and consequently took his wheel, my poor Lirriper and the gig smashed to atoms and never spoke afterwards. Mrs. Lirriper's Lodgings
  • The major hole was for the ‘crew’ and the smaller hole was the base for the pottery kiln.
  • Draw thee waters for the siege, fortify thy strong holds: go into clay, and tread the morter, make strong the brickkiln. Villaraigosa And Nunez Cut And Run - Video Report
  • Then the grain was roasted in the kilns to produce malt for delivery to the breweries.
  • The kiln is stoked initially with wood until the brick kiln is trembling from the heat and the flames. Times, Sunday Times
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • The imperfections are then cleaned off with tools and the casting is put in the kiln at 1225 cone 6 and becomes vitrified porcelain.
  • The wind was tremendous, but what was more surprising still was its warmth; it seemed to be of brick-kiln heat as it screamed round him. Hornblower In The West Indies
  • The kilns that calcine the lime used in cement are often natural gas fired.
  • The lime kiln belly rotated on giant cogs into the dark of the next chamber.
  • At the same time, Iraqi potters developed luster glazes by adding metallic elements to the surface of the glazed piece before a second firing in the kiln.
  • Wines, particularly wines naturally low in tannins themselves, can taste aggressively tannic after being matured in barrels made from kiln-dried, as opposed to air-dried, wood.
  • World-soaked preachers and churches must be kiln-dried before they are fit for revival kindling wood.
  • These are then fired in kilns and collected or posted out the following day.
  • On Sunday there will be music song and dance at Stradbally Cove, 2-4p.m., taking place under the old limekiln, with dancing on the wooden stage created by Tom Power.
  • It had two butchers, two coopers, two weavers, a shoemaker, blacksmith, a cornmill, a pound, a lime kiln and, of course, a pub.
  • Each whale ship carries its own brick kiln, above which are two big shining pots.
  • The proposal to move the vans was to reduce disturbance to residents of the new Kiln Corner housing development.
  • People using acrylic paints can take away the finished article, but those who prefer water-based paints must wait a few days while they are glazed and fired in a kiln.
  • The combustion of a vastly increased bulk of pulverized coal and a greatly enlarged combustion zone, extending about forty feet longitudinally into the kiln -- thus providing an area within which the material might be maintained in a clinkering temperature for a sufficiently long period to insure its being thoroughly clinkered from periphery to centre. Edison, His Life and Inventions, vol. 2
  • Without the kiln, which is designed to reach the perfect temperature to cause the clay to harden, the piece of clay would remain useless. Babes with a Beatitude
  • These were superseded by more substantial updraught kilns which have been found right across the northern suburbs.
  • From here continue for another 1.5 km and you will see, en route, disused limekilns, the old pack horse bridge and remnants of the old charcoal burning sites all these feature are posted en route.
  • The imperfections are then cleaned off with tools and the casting is put in the kiln at 1225 cone 6 and becomes vitrified porcelain.
  • If I could regulate the gas supply with a electrically-activated valve, I could adapt my breadboarded controller to the gas kiln.
  • Lumber dried by artificial heat in kilns has not the life in it that is possessed by air-seasoned material.
  • The top surface of the kiln is a flat steel sheet made by flattening old oil drums. Chapter 9
  • This is then reacted in another kiln with hydrogen fluoride (HF) to form uranium tetrafluoride (UF4). Uranium enrichment
  • Skirt the breeding colony of common terns that plunge-dive in the surf, and head out across the sands towards the lime kilns at Beadnell harbour, where you can catch the bus back to Seahouses.
  • Mbita loko yingahisiwanga ayitiyi When a pot is not properly kilned it cannot last Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
  • Low-level heat generated by the process is used to heat kilns used for drying timber. Times, Sunday Times
  • Capen keeps many aged examples of local brick, including one from an 1800 farmhouse in Frederick with a hoofprint impression likely made by a farm animal when bricks were lying out to dry before being fired in a wood kiln. Brick facades are sturdy, but keeping them that way requires care
  • All timber used is kiln-dried and pressure-impregnated to withstand the harsh desert climate and is from renewable sources.
  • By a similar stroke of the pen, a limekiln in Thrislington obtained a licence to burn fuel that was 100 per cent hazardous.
  • Meung: Troilus and Creseide, from Lollius of Urbino: The Cock and the Fox, from the Lais of Marie: The House of Fame, from the French or Italian: and poor Gower he uses as if he were only a brick-kiln or stone-quarry out of which to build his house. Representative Men
  • Original internal features include the kilns, low ceiling heights between floors, steeping tanks and shutter mechanisms for window openings.
  • Since the pieces are still quite moist, they must be dried in large ovens, called kilns, before they become hard enough to be packed.
  • Then I turn the kiln up in the morning and complete the firing slowly.
  • From clay and modeling tools to kilns and how-to-books.
  • Clay can also be decorated with paint once it is dry or has been fired in a kiln.
  • I knew the limekiln as well as I knew the old Battery, but they were miles apart; so that, if a light had been burning at each point that night, there would have been a long strip of the blank horizon between the two bright specks. Great Expectations
  • Tops creates moulded glass sculptures using kiln casting, inspired by everyday items such as taps and bolts, with part of the sculpture in the original metal, and the rest in glass.
  • His food was brought to him every day, a mess of grain in the husk, in a truck — a small railway truck, like one of the trucks he was perpetually filling with chalk, and this load he used to char in an old limekiln and then devour. The Food of the Gods and how it came to Earth
  • The Kilnsey Park three have successfully evaded traps that caught their fellow escapees and are foiling staff's attempts to win them back.
  • Concern has been expressed about the long term survival of the Island's last two remaining limekiln structures.
  • It then passes through the kiln chamber holding the pottery and is vented through an exterior chimney.
  • Thought to be Anglo-Saxon, this could have been a primitive pottery kiln or a malting oven, used in beer making.
  • The bricks are left in the kiln to bake.
  • A leading Methodist from Filey town, who owed the doctor half a guinea, came one summer and set up his staff in the hollow of a limekiln, where he lived upon fish for change of diet, and because he could get it for nothing. Mary Anerley
  • In 1987, excavations in the Calle Pureza in Triana, the pottery district of Seville, brought to light a collapsed kiln full of pottery wasters.
  • It had two butchers, two coopers, two weavers, a shoemaker, blacksmith, a cornmill, a pound, a lime kiln and, of course, a pub.
  • Later period kilns also used broken pots to pack out the roof, to help prevent any sudden collapses as the temperature rises.
  • Good frames are made with kiln-dried wood to prevent warping and cracking.
  • To supply wood for the kilns native red beech in the area was logged.
  • Skutt has been a leading manufacturer of electric kilns and kiln vent systems for nearly 50 years.
  • After making the pottery shelters, the children watched as their efforts were fired in a kiln.
  • The preheater-kiln system consumes 5 to 5.4 GJ/t of clinker (4). 2. Energy efficiency in the production of high-energy content building materials
  • Danish Siddiqui/Reuters Vidya, 12, carried bricks to be baked in a kiln at a brickyard in Satara district, India, Monday. Photos of the Day
  • The air felt fresh after our time in Kathmandu Valley, where brick kilns and fires generate a thick layer of smog that blankets the city.
  • Crate & Barrel's eco-friendly Petrie sofa, seen here in Graphite, is crafted from sustainable kiln-dried hardwood and soy-based polyfoam cushions. $1,899 through www.crateandbarrel.com. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • An increasing silica modulus impairs the burnability by reducing the liquid phase content, causes slow setting, hardening and also dusting in the kiln. 5.1 Raw-mix design
  • Watch out for stray ballista bolts, javelins etc, and avoid all the experimental kilns as they tend to explode.
  • Single malts, as their name suggests, are made from malted barley dried in peat-fired kilns, hence their smoky bouquets, and distilled slowly in pot stills. Times, Sunday Times
  • With softwoods it is a common practice to kiln-dry direct from the saw. Seasoning of Wood
  • This, in turn, might increase the possibility for build-ups in the cooler parts of the kiln system.
  • Experience-based strategies could establish the heat of the kiln during for and during firing, and tools such as Wedgwood's pyrometer added further control for the process. 41 The Creation of Color in Eighteenth-Century Europe
  • The dome itself shimmers with gold: it’s made of 2,836 pieces of gold favrile glass, which was cast in the kilns of Louis Comfort Tiffany on Long Island, and it is magnificent in the way a palace should be magnificent. I Feel Earthquakes More Often Than They Happen
  • It is still possible to see the wagon entrance to the quarry at the north-eastern corner and remnants of haulage roads to lime kilns.
  • Blended and homogenized raw meal is then fed to a suspension preheater of the counter type, where it is preheated and partially calcined by the hot gases from the kiln passing in counter current. 2.1 Fluidized-bed process
  • At the same time, Iraqi potters developed luster glazes by adding metallic elements to the surface of the glazed piece before a second firing in the kiln.
  • The latter is a capital-intensive, large-scale continuous kiln, which is outside the scope of this memorandum. 1 Continuous kilns utilise heat from the cooling bricks to pre-heat green bricks and combustion air, or to dry bricks before they are put into the kiln. Chapter 10
  • With the coming of night, however, the wind lost its brick-kiln heat and blew almost chilly, so that Hornblower found himself shivering a little. Hornblower In The West Indies
  • Wet and dry lime techniques can be used to desulphurise the kiln exhaust gases prior to the EP's.
  • On balance, however, Mulligan paints a picture of great architectural variety and reveals many hidden treasures such as octagonal boathouses, a gothic mausoleum, old lime kilns, follies and mill buildings.
  • The factory uses combined electricity and coal-fired kilns for firing the bricks.
  • A further development of traditional smoking techniques is the adoption of the West African banda kiln known as the “Ivory Coast kiln”. Chapter 6
  • The video closes as Favour opens the kiln to show us the finished products, which have been treated with a transparent glaze.
  • Until the 18th century, malt was "kilned" over wood fires making most beers dark brown or black, and contributing significantly to the pollution in cities like London. The Barley Blog
  • It soon turned into a lime kiln and sent out hot burning vapours.
  • The fire of floor-crossing which they kilned (sic) in the hope that it would burn the IFP is now burning their own hands and we hope that they are learning some hard life lessons from this experience. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • The kiln has a through draft, the flames from the furnace entering the glost oven.
  • The steel structure of the kiln is protected from the extreme process heat by a refractory lining.
  • Dressed in Wellington boots and a waxed jacket, Mike Robinson, proprietor of the Harwood Arms pub in London and Pot Kiln pub near Newbury, Berkshire, England, whacks some freshly killed fallow deer onto a home-made barbeque, pulls out some chanterelle and wood-blewit mushrooms plucked from the forests that morning, and throws them into another pan with some rich-yoked duck eggs. A New Breed of Epicurean Delights
  • The rafters bend under the weight of this brick-kiln. Letters of Two Brides
  • Modern excavations at Giza have found remnants of copper and even the hearths or kilns used to process the metal into tools.
  • Paul Woodfield says a pre-construction geophysics survey revealed nothing, so no prior excavation was required; the sherds, with large quantities of kiln wasters, were unstratified.
  • Kilner will also be looking for more from his forwards after their disappointing showing on Saturday.
  • There it is added to the fuel in the kilns where the malted barley is dried.
  • Before beginning to build a field kiln, which is sometimes called a scove kiln, it is necessary to know the following: Chapter 8
  • His kilns are out of action and it could be weeks before they are lit again. Times, Sunday Times
  • The colour inside the kiln is a good indicator of the temperature. 2. Kilns
  • Look out for the remains of what could be a limekiln just before you ford the river.
  • The hospital, which remains to this day, was built of bricks and tiles made of clay from the valley a mile away using a wood fired kiln.
  • Many Red Oak and White Oak items will see green price firming without corresponding increases in kiln-dried prices, at least not this summer.
  • Since then, she has studied accountancy, plumbing, served in a whole food shop and cleaned out the kiln at a local pottery.
  • The dragon kiln has 17 holes throughout the entire length of its body called stoke holes which the kiln operator uses during firing for observation and feeding of wood fuel. Museum Blogs
  • As could be expected fragments related to potters 'activity (kiln spacers, ceramic slag, dolium fragments, miscasts, etc.) were a bit omnipresent in the area in low numbers. Interactive Dig Sagalassos - Survey Report 9: Urban
  • And he brought forth the people that were therein, and put them under saws, and under harrows of iron, and under axes of iron, and made them pass through the brick-kiln: and thus did he unto all the cities of the children of Ammon. Probably Just One Of Those Funny Coincidences
  • The utility model relates to a refractory layer anchoring part, in particular to an anchoring part for the sleeve on lime kiln.
  • A number of special features were built into the new ship to facilitate these courses, including a full demonstration kitchen set and the industry's first onboard pottery studio and kilns.
  • The prehistoric root flourished in many Indo-European languages, mainly carrying ideas to do with “cooking” and “ripening,” as seen in numerous words that English has borrowed: cook, cuisine, kitchen, kiln, terra cotta, and even precocious, as in “pre-ripened,” or “mature ahead of time.” The English Is Coming!
  • This style derives its name from the betus oil in which the clayware is immersed before it is fired in the kiln. Uncovering Tonala's history at the National Ceramic Museum
  • Vegas has a sweetness I adore and I loved him for his choice of book (The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists) and his luxury (a kiln; he has a degree in ceramics). Rewind radio: The Brown Years; Desert Island Discs; Craig Brown's Lost Diaries
  • Design the flow of work around work stations - separate stations for hand-building, glazing, and temporary storage for unglazed and glazed greenware and glazed bisque objects ready for loading in the kilns.
  • A saggar is a protective ceramic vessel in which a pot is placed when fired in the kiln. New Statesman
  • It has a kiln and rows of pots, russet red and deep blue, sometimes overlain with painted flowers. DREAMS OF INNOCENCE
  • Other villagers accuse Zhou of destroying the limekiln belonging to a foundry, and bricks from a demolition site are sitting in a village field that residents want for farming.
  • A few lucky crows have nests under the overhanging rocks and nearby was a limekiln with orchids.
  • I play around with fusible art glass (baked in a kiln) and have brought bundles to MX this way, inside a suitcase. Dual Pane wood windows
  • The site contains several scheduled monuments, including beehive coking ovens, calcining kilns, blowing engine houses, and a unique lift tower which was used to transport material to the top of the furnaces.
  • They wove their own twine fishing nets and grass baskets, and molded and kilned ceramic bowls with NYT > Home Page
  • They were clearly mass-produced in permanent kilns using a finer fabric and were a far more standardised product.
  • Pottery in Texas was fired in a groundhog kiln, so named because part of the kiln is buried in the earth.
  • Morris said the locations of five were certain: Shancough, Tawnagh, and Aghanagh in the barony of Tirerill; and Kilnamanagh and Kilaraght in Coolavin.
  • Features bricks kilned on site and altars made of imported Italian marble. Preservation Virginia releases annual list
  • James had taken half the logs as payment for his sawing into rough boards, and charged me $800 for kiln-drying and planing into tongue-and-groove.
  • So we were in good spirits as we dropped down towards Normanby, passed scrub of yellow flower and red hip, then a kissing gate, orchard, and a yew hedge sculpted in the shape of pottery kilns.
  • If dug into a slope the draught can be channelled into the pit kiln.
  • The meat was dried in the malting kiln and ground in the malt mill.
  • In segmentary societies, craft production was primarily organized at the household level, and village sites may be found to contain pottery kilns, or slag from metalworking.
  • These were superseded by more substantial updraught kilns which have been found right across the northern suburbs.
  • It may be noted that the building at the top is an old lime kiln where they used to burn the cornstone to get lime for their fields.
  • NOAH ADAMS: A small white house, a work shed and sales room, stacks of firewood around, a 30-foot-long kiln made from firebrick - here is the potter. Potter's Wood-Fired Kiln Sparks Friendships
  • Those wet jugs then have to be baked in true kilns, for which you have to keep the fire burning by providing enough wood.
  • 8. Then came the word of the LORD unto Jeremiah in Tahpanhes, saying, 9. Take great stones in thine hand, and hide them in the clay in the brickkiln, which is at the entry of Pharaoh's house in Tahpanhes, in the sight of the men of Judah; Villaraigosa And Nunez Cut And Run - Video Report
  • This paper emphasizes on introducing the design and structure of high temperature gas-fired shuttle kiln.
  • However, a limekiln, built in the northern part of the atrium on top of earthquake material, attests human activity in the area of the urban mansion, also in the post-antique period. Interactive Dig Sagalassos - Domestic Area Report 2
  • Hawkins wondered about the number two kiln — a reduction fire on a load of lusterware mugs. Science Fiction Hall of Fame
  • He played quarterback, strong safety, punter and placekicker at North Central High School in Kiln, Missisippi, for his father, Irvin.
  • Also limekilns, an 1832 bridge, garlic, and a big tipped-over larch tree.
  • When I at last pulled the pizza from the roasting kiln of the oven I was greeted with something less pizza and more cracker covered with oatmeal.
  • They are charring wood in a kiln.
  • The Progressive type of dry kiln is adapted to such lines of manufacture that have large quantities of material to kiln-dry where the species to be dried is of a similiar nature or texture, and does not vary to any great extent in its thickness, such, for instance, as: Seasoning of Wood
  • For upper grades, students may want to try to mix their own ash glazes and test fire on pieces of pottery in their school's kiln, if the school has one.
  • It can be easily molded into a wide variety of shapes, which are then fired in a kiln and transformed into solid silver.
  • The only way we know how to make ceramics is high temperature kilns.
  • Once the kiln cooled, usually after two or three days, the finished ware was loaded onto flatboats or wagons and shipped to distributors and merchants often several hundred miles away.
  • The operation of a vertical-shaft kiln, which is the heart of the process, is such that negligible emission takes place as the shaft kiln itself acts as an effective filter. 9.1 Dust-generation sources and characteristics
  • A feast ensues – huge platters of Islay seafood including sweet crab and a type of kiln-roasted salmon called bradan rost, which beats your usual gelatinous smoked salmon hands down in my opinion. Soul o' Plays and Pranks!
  • Also, near the brick-kiln there lay a patch of black mud in the glistening, crumpled-velvet blue substance of which two urchins of five and three were, breechless, and naked from the waist upwards, kneading yellow feet amid a silence as absorbed as though their one desire in life had been to impregnate the mud with the red radiance of the sun. Through Russia
  • Steve Sharps is in the logging business, but is especially interested in selecting out curly maple and tiger maple boards, many of which are being air-dried in sheds on his property or have been kiln dried.
  • The kilns that calcine the lime used in cement are often natural gas fired.
  • The fact is it must be against natural justice to expect six frontagers to keep footing the cost of keeping the Tile Kiln Lane passable.
  • Put them in the malt-kiln," said M'Aulay; "and keep the breadth of the middenstead between them and the M'Donalds; they are but unfriends to each other. A Legend of Montrose
  • The imperfections are then cleaned off with tools and the casting is put in the kiln at 1225 cone 6 and becomes vitrified porcelain.
  • That lumber had to be dry kilned until it was seasoned properly before it could be cut and made into furniture. Oral History Interview with Robert Riley, February 1, 1994. Interview K-0106. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • The lime kiln belly rotated on giant cogs into the dark of the next chamber.
  • After the paste is applied, the pineapple is fired in the kiln for a period of five hours. A Family Tradition: The Pineapple Pottery Of Hilario Alejos Madrigal
  • The narrow trail began at the end of the campground and meandered alongside Lime Kiln Creek.
  • So what we would do was he would take a load of green lumber to Mebane that we had cut at the saw mill and in turn bring back a load of dry kilned to make our furniture. Oral History Interview with Robert Riley, February 1, 1994. Interview K-0106. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • When firing clay, the temperature at which you fire is gauged by cones placed in a kiln.
  • Manufacture of cement clinker in long rotary kilns by the addition of volatile fuels components directly into the calcining zone of the rotary kiln
  • Historical local landmark buildings, including a late 19th century lime kiln and a granary, have been thoughtfully restored and integrate well within the layout of the farmstead.
  • The latter is a doppelbock, an extra strong lager that measures a formidable 8 percent alcohol by volume, made with malt kilned over oak instead of the usual beechwood. Beer: Bacon overload
  • To ensure fine grinding, it is always advisable to kiln-dry it first. Dr. Allinson's cookery book Comprising many valuable vegetarian recipes
  • While thin stock, such as cooperage and box stuff is less inclined to give trouble by undue checking than 1-inch and thicker, one will find that any dry kiln will give more uniform results and, at the same time, be more economical in the use of steam, when the humidity and temperature is carried at as high a point as possible without injury to the material to be dried. Seasoning of Wood
  • Evidently there were still enough blanks from Jingdezhen for enameling in the muffle kilns of Canton.
  • Wet and dry lime techniques can be used to desulphurise the kiln exhaust gases prior to the EP's.
  • My poor Lirriper was a handsome figure of a man, with a beaming eye and a voice as mellow as a musical instrument made of honey and steel, but he had ever been a free liver being in the commercial travelling line and travelling what he called a limekiln road -- "a dry road, Emma my dear," my poor Lirriper says to me, "where I have to lay the dust with one drink or another all day long and half the night, and it wears me Emma" -- and this led to his running through a good deal and might have run through the turnpike too when that dreadful horse that never would stand still for a single instant set off, but for its being night and the gate shut and consequently took his wheel, my poor Lirriper and the gig smashed to atoms and never spoke afterwards. Mrs. Lirriper's Lodgings
  • Then the maltster usually continues the drying process past the point necessary for arrested growth of the embryo with a process called kilning.
  • And now he began to get a little hungry, and very thirsty; for he had run a long way, and the sun had risen high in heaven, and the rock was as hot as an oven, and the air danced reels over it, as it does over a limekiln, till everything round seemed quivering and melting in the glare. The Water Babies
  • At the same time, potters developed luster glazes by adding metallic elements to the surface of the glazed piece before a second firing in the kiln.
  • The effect of the conservatory has been comparable to kiln drying.
  • It has two three-bay kilns with pyramid-shaped roofs and raised flat-topped flues and a timber-framed lucam - a projecting loading door with a gabled roof through which barley was hoisted into the building to be turned into malt.
  • Take great stones in thine hand, and hide them in the clay in the brickkiln, which is at the entry of Pharaoh's house in Tah'panhes, in the sight of the men of Judah; and say unto them, Thus saith the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel; Behold, I will send and take Nebuchadrez'zar the king of Babylon, my servant, and will set his throne upon these stones that I have hid; and he shall spread his royal pavilion over them. Jeremiah 43.
  • All methods require that the mould be fired in the kiln; the mould can then be used again for numerous replicas.
  • Molding something out of clay, decorating it and glazing it, then firing it in the kiln is a fantastic experience for young artists.
  • The kiln is fully automatic and can be left to turn off at the end of the set time.
  • It is self-evident that an ideal kiln would be one that produced the maximum quantity of thoroughly clinkered material with a minimum amount of fuel, labor, and investment. Edison, His Life and Inventions, vol. 2
  • Pyrolysis of scrap tire was studied in a pilot scale rotary kiln.
  • On the top of the kiln should be placed a ventilator to draw off the steam of the malt, this may be done by means of a loover or cow; the latter turns with the wind, the former is stationary. The American Practical Brewer and Tanner
  • Sumerian ziggurats were built of sun-baked mud bricks faced with kiln-fired clay cones to protect the vulnerable mud-bricks from the weather.
  • And he brought forth the people that were therein, and put them under saws, and under harrows of iron, and under axes of iron, and made them pass through the brickkiln: and thus did he unto all the cities of the children of Ammon. 2 Samuel 12.
  • Make sure that the wood of the dresser is kiln-dried and of high quality The Evolution Dresser by Ferruccio Laviani
  • The kiln was troublesome at first, Mr. Liu said, and was used only once a year until its walls were reinforced in 2010 with additional insulation on the outside and a new inner wall of bricks placed in a latticelike formation on one end. NYT > Home Page
  • Five or six days of ordinarily fine weather will dry the madder sufficiently, when it may be put away till it is convenient to kiln-dry and grind it. The Commercial Products of the Vegetable Kingdom Considered in Their Various Uses to Man and in Their Relation to the Arts and Manufactures; Forming a Practical Treatise & Handbook of Reference for the Colonist, Manufacturer, Merchant, and Consumer, o
  • The track is cut into the valley side, there were tin mine remnants, lime kilns, circular sheepfolds - old stuff in the harsh almost brutal landscape.
  • Her ceramics were made with clay that was baked in a kiln to make it permanent.
  • Kiln-fired bricks were invented by the Mesopotamians to create the complex towering ziggurats of the Sumerian and Babylonian empires.
  • New types of kilns were introduced for potting and tile-manufacture, and new technologies developed around glass-making and metalworking.
  • Dutch enthusiasm for the new material was particularly keen and by the seventeenth century, one kiln could produce over half a million bricks in a single firing.
  • `The tanneries, the breweries of Shadwell, or the lime oasts and kilns of Limehouse...' `Phogh! THE RIVAL QUEENS: A COUNTESS ASHBY DE LA ZOUCHE MYSTERY
  • The kiln includes a floating door system with four spring door latches and a recess on the inner door surface.
  • The following figures show the gain in weight by absorption of several coniferous woods, air-dry at the start, expressed in per cent of the kiln-dry weight: Seasoning of Wood
  • West Wiltshire MP Andrew Murrison has challenged the Environment Agency's plans to allow the burning of toxic waste in cement and lime kilns.
  • His kilns are out of action and it could be weeks before they are lit again. Times, Sunday Times
  • Project manager Dave Askew said: ‘We are keen to get it right, as the limekilns are industrial, and not the type we usually associate with an area of outstanding natural beauty, as this area is.’
  • However, the location of a kiln is plotted on three separate survey plats of the mountaintop done between 1806 and 1809.
  • It had two butchers, two coopers, two weavers, a shoemaker, blacksmith, a cornmill, a pound, a lime kiln and, of course, a pub.
  • They were kilned at the Hermitage Plantation on the Savannah River. Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
  • My mouth was kiln-dry and full of the taste of salt, the ugly taste of fear. The Satan Bug
  • All our glost firing is done in tunnel kilns.
  • The floor of the kiln is first covered with bricks, placed on end, at a little distance from each other, so as to allow the fire to pass between them, and the tiles are placed _on end_ on these. Draining for Profit, and Draining for Health
  • It mixes manure with recycled materials like cement or lime kiln dust, coal ash from electric power plants, and gypsum.
  • Almost as interesting as the variety of birds were the rambling mud homesteads of the local Farafara tribespeople with their conical grain storage outbuildings and pottery-making kilns.
  • Virtually every stage of barrel production has an impact on the liquid it was designed to hold - the age of the trees, sawing versus splitting, air-dried as opposed to kiln-dried and how the barrel is toasted.
  • In summer roosts have been found in caves, lime kilns and ruined buildings especially those with open roofs.
  • The top of my firebrick kiln AF-99 is always warm and just hanging out, wishing that it could be of use too. Better Scents in the Studio
  • The resulting kilns, known as the zigzag kilns, have a faster firing schedule than the Hoffmann kiln. Chapter 10
  • After the tiles were coated, they were loaded into the kilns and fired to cone 5.
  • “Put them in the malt-kiln,” said M’Aulay; “and keep the breadth of the middenstead between them and the M’Donalds; they are but unfriends to each other.” A Legend of Montrose

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy