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  2. Fuller (groove) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuller_(groove)

    A fuller is a rounded or beveled longitudinal groove or slot along the flat side of a blade (e.g., a sword, knife, or bayonet) that serves to both lighten and stiffen the blade, when considering its reduced weight.

  3. Cutting mat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cutting_mat

    A cutting mat is a mat that is placed between a workpiece to be cut and the surface below (e.g. a table) to protect the surface. They are used, amongst other things, in hobby work for precise and clean cuts of paper, cardboard or textiles using a scalpel or rotary cutter .

  4. Sink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sink

    A bottom mount sink at the Ernest Hemingway House. Bottom-mount or under-mount sinks are installed below the countertop surface. The edge of the countertop material is exposed at the hole created for the sink (and so must be a carefully finished edge rather than a rough cut). The sink is then clamped to the bottom of the material from below.

  5. Fuller's earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuller's_earth

    Fuller's earth is the most common spelling today, but both fullers earth and fullers' earth remain in wide use. [4] Fuller's earth is also known by the following other names: Bleaching clay, [5] probably because fulling whitened the cloth. Whitening clay, particularly when used to treat facial pigmentation, such as melasma.

  6. Fet-Mats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fet-Mats

    Fet-Mats or Fat Mats (born Mats Israelsson; died 1677) was a natural mummy found in Sweden in 1719. In 1719, miners in the Falun Mine found an intact dead body in a water-filled, long-unused tunnel. When the body was put on display, it was identified by his former fiancée, Margaret Olsdotter, as Fet-Mats Israelsson, a native of Boda ...

  7. Copper sheathing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_sheathing

    The use of copper sheathing was first suggested by Charles Perry in 1708, though it was rejected by the Navy Board on grounds of high cost and perceived maintenance difficulties. The first experiments with copper sheathing were made in the late 1750s: the bottoms and sides of several ships' keels and false keels were sheathed with copper plates ...