Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
He leaped up to one of the crossbars leading to a cat hole near the ceiling.
Also known as a cat hole.
A hawser passes through a hawsehole, also known as a cat hole, located on the hawse.
A cat hole may refer to:
There's a cat hole cut in the bottom of the door, and Josephine used to stand on it and swing to and fro.
A cat hole is a one-time use pit toilet often utilized by campers, hikers and other outdoor recreationalists.
Other felines were returning home from a stroll along the Neva Embankment Everywhere, cat holes are cut into heavy metal doors, so they can roam at will.
The 14th-century English writer Geoffrey Chaucer described a simple cat hole in the "Miller's Tale" from his Canterbury Tales (late 14th century).
Cadole is a village in Flintshire, Wales; the name was originally Cat hole or Cathole and the village was known as this in living memory.
The intervening space between tire and wheel well is sometimes called the dead cat hole, according to Peter Davis, director of interior design for global compact utility vehicles at G.M.
Here a number of streams disappear below ground at swallow holes named Cats Hole, Pollawaddy, Pollasumera and Polliniska, all forming part of the Marble Arch cave system.
Atkinson speculated that the stalactite originated from Cat Hole cave, which (along with Tooth Hole cave) Whittle and Wysocki note as a possible source of the quartz too.
Chroniclers report that most mill owners whose mills were Am Katzenloch (a prepositional expression, but used as a proper name; it means "At the Cat Hole") were inhabitants of Hettenrodt.
Born in West Witton in Wensleydale, Susan Peacock work in various domestic jobs before marrying Richard Parrington of the Cat Hole Inn in Keld.
Bronze Age evidence, such as funeral urns, pottery and human remains, has been found in Tooth Cave at Llethryd, Culver Hole (Port Eynon) and Cat Hole Cave.
As for cat holes , they were two small holes cut into the stern above the gun ports on a sailing man o' war, on the same level as the capstan, and used for leading a stern hawser to the capstan when required to secure the ship astern.