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Exact(5)
Sit on the terrace next to the immense 17th-century stone factory that made rope for French warships until the French Revolution (restored and now a museum).
He gave them little more than a loin cloth and together they made rope, tea and coffee and learned to set traps.
For the director, like Brandon and Philip, murder was an art, and when he made Rope he had a stunt of his own that he wanted to pull off.
Rope-manufacture was another local industry: Mansley's Rope works on Twist Lane made rope by hand, using a rope walk.
The meat, often preserved, is an important winter nutrition source; the flippers are fermented and stored as a delicacy until spring; tusks and bone were historically used for tools, as well as material for handicrafts; the oil was rendered for warmth and light; the tough hide made rope and house and boat coverings; and the intestines and gut linings made waterproof parkas.
Similar(52)
A more prosaic explanation is that they made ropes from baobab tree fibres.
They make rope doormats and sparkly, colorful bangle bracelets.
At stations surrounding the work site, they tried carving stone, making rope and forging iron.
Pictures from Egyptian tombs c. 1500 bc show men walking while making rope.
In Greenland, some Inuit make rope from strips of the skin of the sleeper shark (Somniosus microcephalus).
It may have been used as a food crop, and it certainly was used to make rope, matting, and sandals.
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