释义 |
Definition of lathe in English: lathenoun leɪðleɪð A machine for shaping wood, metal, or other material by means of a rotating drive which turns the piece being worked on against changeable cutting tools. 车床 Example sentencesExamples - He built his own tools - lathes and presses - mixed his inks, shaped the spheres, and printed all of his own maps, probably relying on increasingly available atlases.
- Across the alley three men sat on the floor in an open room beside lathes and other machine shop equipment, each one busily manufacturing a gun.
- In middle school, I also took wood shop and eventually became obsessed with the wood lathe.
- His huge wind-measuring instrument with its giant dials had a room of its own and there was another for his tools and lathes.
- Since he was interested in tools, we showed him a simple lathe (a tool he had wished he could use) in a glass case at the Science Museum in London.
- Visitors were also shown vases that were cast from the same material and turned on a wood lathe.
- When Jonathan was 12, he started turning wood on a lathe.
- For example, around 1750 Antoine Thiout introduced the innovation of equipping a lathe with a screw drive.
- Other aluminum bearing applications are in heavy tooling, such as boring mills, presses, lathes, milling machines, and grinding mills, and as hydraulic pump bushings.
- After leaving school at 14, he worked in an engineering workshop where he learnt to use a metal lathe and other equipment.
- A woodturner needs a lathe and some basic tools.
- He had a workshop with a lathe and other tools, where he used to go to commune in spirit with the horny handed sons of toil.
- The lathe has a material feed mechanism and will turn out cases as long as it has rod to feed.
- You notice the lathe and the other tools first, crafted down to each groove and handle.
- In addition to the belt-driven machines, there is an electric lathe and an electric drill press.
- High Schools of the day offered some pretty good metal working programs in classrooms outfitted with lathes, milling machines and shapers.
- Veneer is made by placing a cut log on a giant lathe and then rotating it against a cutter.
- He will turn wood on a lathe and tend the museum's medieval garden, which has plants for household, culinary and medicinal use.
- Industrial accidents, too, are common, especially to people using high-speed machinery such as grinders, drills, saws, lathes or milling machines without adequate eye protection.
- I take the bulk away with a wood lathe tool, take it down and smooth it out with clay tools, and buff it with a rubber pad.
verb leɪðleɪð [with object]Shape with a lathe. 用车床加工 I have lathed metal in a machine shop Example sentencesExamples - The place wasn't wealthy: the plates were rough lathed wood, grease from meals soaked into it.
- The mandapa remained a square, though it was now distinguished by circular columns, the shafts of which had been lathed and thus acquired a number of parallel knife-edges.
OriginMiddle English: probably from Old Danish lad 'structure, frame', perhaps from Old Norse hlath 'pile, heap', related to hlatha (see lade1). Rhymesbathe, rathe, scathe, spathe, swathe Definition of lathe in US English: lathenounlāT͟Hleɪð A machine for shaping wood, metal, or other material by means of a rotating drive which turns the piece being worked on against changeable cutting tools. 车床 Example sentencesExamples - The lathe has a material feed mechanism and will turn out cases as long as it has rod to feed.
- His huge wind-measuring instrument with its giant dials had a room of its own and there was another for his tools and lathes.
- Veneer is made by placing a cut log on a giant lathe and then rotating it against a cutter.
- Visitors were also shown vases that were cast from the same material and turned on a wood lathe.
- When Jonathan was 12, he started turning wood on a lathe.
- High Schools of the day offered some pretty good metal working programs in classrooms outfitted with lathes, milling machines and shapers.
- A woodturner needs a lathe and some basic tools.
- Across the alley three men sat on the floor in an open room beside lathes and other machine shop equipment, each one busily manufacturing a gun.
- Other aluminum bearing applications are in heavy tooling, such as boring mills, presses, lathes, milling machines, and grinding mills, and as hydraulic pump bushings.
- In middle school, I also took wood shop and eventually became obsessed with the wood lathe.
- For example, around 1750 Antoine Thiout introduced the innovation of equipping a lathe with a screw drive.
- Since he was interested in tools, we showed him a simple lathe (a tool he had wished he could use) in a glass case at the Science Museum in London.
- Industrial accidents, too, are common, especially to people using high-speed machinery such as grinders, drills, saws, lathes or milling machines without adequate eye protection.
- After leaving school at 14, he worked in an engineering workshop where he learnt to use a metal lathe and other equipment.
- He had a workshop with a lathe and other tools, where he used to go to commune in spirit with the horny handed sons of toil.
- I take the bulk away with a wood lathe tool, take it down and smooth it out with clay tools, and buff it with a rubber pad.
- You notice the lathe and the other tools first, crafted down to each groove and handle.
- In addition to the belt-driven machines, there is an electric lathe and an electric drill press.
- He will turn wood on a lathe and tend the museum's medieval garden, which has plants for household, culinary and medicinal use.
- He built his own tools - lathes and presses - mixed his inks, shaped the spheres, and printed all of his own maps, probably relying on increasingly available atlases.
verblāT͟Hleɪð [with object]Shape with a lathe. 用车床加工 I have lathed metal in a machine shop Example sentencesExamples - The place wasn't wealthy: the plates were rough lathed wood, grease from meals soaked into it.
- The mandapa remained a square, though it was now distinguished by circular columns, the shafts of which had been lathed and thus acquired a number of parallel knife-edges.
OriginMiddle English: probably from Old Danish lad ‘structure, frame’, perhaps from Old Norse hlath ‘pile, heap’, related to hlatha (see lade). |