Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
All three possibilities are shown in figure 10.7 for quenched terylene.
She had fashioned new stays and shrouds from Terylene rope.
"Oh yes, Mother let me have a new set of Terylene sails, in red and yellow.
The trap is made of a material such as terylene netting and can be various colours.
Also, bodily acids from one's hands can cause cracking over time, so handling should be done using cotton or terylene gloves.
She hung old cotton sheets around her Sunday dress, her pleated terylene skirt.
At a word from Willie, Collier began to unfold the Terylene sail.
It disappeared silently over the side and the Terylene as silently slid down after it.
I'm going to do that cross-over pattern with frills again, the one I did in Terylene before.'
In recent years Terylene and nylon have been used with the effect that coloured spinnakers are now used by most boats.
Sails were made from the new Terylene threads and deck gear now included winches for easier handling of sheets.
My white Terylene shirt was smudged from the fall, and I washed it and hung it up to dry.
An alternative reason for the name chosen is that is crimped (i.e. bulked up) Terylene.
'And in their Terylene trousers.'
The boom had been wedged in the hollow base of the broken aluminium mast and was stayed by Terylene rope shrouds.
The catamarans had modern Dacron sails, Terylene stays and sheets with modern roller blocks.
The top of the cage is covered with nylon or terylene netting tied with string - you could use a scrap from an old net curtain.
Polyester, also called Dacron or Terylene, is a strong, low stretch rope,usually plaited (braided) used for running rigging.
Increasingly used were easy-care synthetic fabrics such as Crimplene, Dacron and Terylene.
The new polymer was later developed into the synthetic textile fibre Terylene by ICI.
Ian Proctor started experimenting with metal masts to replace wooden spars in 1952 and Terylene sails arrived in 1954.
Recent advances in technology have provided large sheets of nylon, Terylene, PVC and allied byproducts of the fossil fuel industries.
They have a black matt finish and are exceptionally durable, although some of the PVC ones are fairly comparable with their reinforcing welded terylene web.
Spread-eagled full length on the rose-patterned Terylene bedspread was the seventeen-stone weight of 'Tinkle Bell'.
Other trade names include Terylene, Tetoron, Trevira and Diolen.