-
lampwork have used the
blowpipe since ancient times, with the
blast being powered by the user's lungs. For
small work, a
mouth-blown
blowpipe may be used with...
-
royal mines and
metal works.
Having taken up the idea of
quantitative mouth blowpipe ****aying,
which was then
almost unknown, he
succeeded in
devising dependable...
- to
catch fish.
Poison dart
frogs have been used to
poison the tips of
blowpipe darts. A wide
variety of
animals are kept as pets, from
invertebrates such...
- the bag is
through blowing into a
blowpipe or blowstick. In some
pipes the
player must
cover the tip of the
blowpipe with the
tongue while inhaling, in...
- the
smaller and less
powerful self-contained torches. The
archaic term "
blowpipe" is
sometimes still used in
relation to oxy-acetylene
welding torches....
- "taco" is used in
other contexts to mean "wedge; wad, plug;
billiard cue;
blowpipe; ramrod; short,
stocky person; [or] short,
thick piece of wood." The etymological...
- in a
wooden socket tied into the bag,
which is
inflated by the
mouth (through a
blowpipe with a
leather nonreturn valve). The
finger holes of the pipe...
-
requires further forming or
decoration to be finished.
Blowpipe – a
hollow steel rod, with a
mouth piece on one end
which the
artist blows through to expand...
- and
drone reeds single. The
blade is also
known sometimes as a tongue.
Blowpipe The pipe
through which the bag is inflated.
Bombarde A shawm-like instrument...
-
innovations include: *puqun: base of a tree; origin,
cause *sumpit:
blowpipe *haRezan:
notched log
ladder (used to
enter pile dwellings) *taytay: bamboo...