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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a flange" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts related to engineering, construction, or manufacturing, where it refers to a projecting flat rim or edge used to strengthen or attach components.
Example: "The pipe was secured in place using a flange to ensure a tight seal."
Alternatives: "a rim" or "a lip".
Exact(60)
One end is straight; the other has a flange.
The wheels were guided by a flange either on the rail or on the wheel.
The 2-Ball was partly inspired by the Dave Pelz putter of the 1980's, which used three actual golf balls mounted on a flange.
The shaft is about a foot longer than the average, and the head has a flange at the bottom, which, Campbell says, keeps him from stubbing putts.
They weld the long seam in the rolled structures, called cans, and then stack the cans to form taller units, each with a flange at top and bottom.
Submersibles will first have to cut six bolts connecting the riser to a flange at the top of the blowout preventer.
He said only that one steam main pulled from the crater had a hole in it, and that a flange bolting that pipe to another pipe was not damaged.
"Derby II," another floorpiece, painted black, is more upright, suggesting a dancer even more in its delicate tilt backward, a flange like a tutu projecting at what might be its front.
I think Max is good at the finer details, like an idea for a pocket shape or a flange on an armhole, which is his favourite detail of all time.
Soon bars everywhere, and not a few private houses, laid in a stock of Irish whiskey and a handful of small stemmed glasses, often decorated with a shamrock, with a flange in the stem that could be grasped firmly without searing one's fingers.
The outer conductor was terminated by a flange.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com