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auger
verb
To use an auger; to drill a hole using an auger.
Exact(53)
Metal-cutting twist drills can drill holes in wood, but they cannot produce as clean a hole as an auger bit or as large a hole as an expansive auger.
Also covered are the origins of the screw's less famous ancestors, the worm-gear and the tortoise, and of other hand-tools such as the bow-drill, the auger, and the carpenter's brace.
He drilled the anus of one man with an auger, and shoved the face of another hard into barbed wire.
Other indicators auger a bright future.
See also auger.
To clear the hole of parings it was necessary to pull the auger from its hole and turn the workpiece over.
Similar(7)
A typical ice-coring effort employs large geodesic domes for protection of an electric hollow-auger drill.
Originated by the ballet teacher Pierre Beauchamp, it was first published by his student Raoul-Auger Feuillet in 1700 as Chorégraphie; ou, l'art de décrire la danse ("Choreography; or, The Art of Describing the Dance").
C. 1675 c. 1710 Raoul-Auger Feuillet, (born c. 1675 died c. 1710) French dancer, dancing master, and choreographer whose dance notation system was published in his Chorégraphie ou l'art de décrire la danse (1700; "Choreography, or the Art of Describing the Dance").
His Orchesography (1706) was the first English version of the French choreographer Raoul-Auger Feuillet's Chorégraphie.
The implementation of Rabi's motion became the work of Pierr-Auger, of France, a distinguished physicist who was the UNESCO'S scientific director.
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