heddle

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Etymology === From Middle English helde, from Old English hefeld, from the root of Proto-Germanic *habjaną (“to have, heave”), from Proto-Indo-European *kap-. Cognate with Old Saxon hevild, Middle Low German hevelte, Icelandic hafald. === Pronunciation === IPA(key): /ˈhɛdəl/ === Noun === heddle (plural heddles) A component in a loom, being one of a number of similar components, through the eye of each of which a distinct strand of the warp is threaded. One of the sets of parallel doubled threads which, with mounting, compose the harness employed to guide the warp threads to the lathe or batten in a loom. ==== Synonyms ==== heald ==== Derived terms ==== heddle hook repair heddle ==== Related terms ==== heddled (adjective) ==== Translations ==== === Verb === heddle (third-person singular simple present heddles, present participle heddling, simple past and past participle heddled) To thread each strand of the warp through the eye of a heddle. 1994, Kim Mi-ju, Gender Division of Labor and Skill as a Factor of Sex Wage Differentials, Hyŏng Cho, Chang Pil-Wha (editors), Gender Division of Labor (in) Korea, Ewha Womans University Press, 116, After heddling she takes the reeds and arranges them as ordered. She knows that if reed denting is uneven, the textile is ruined. ==== Related terms ==== unheddled (adjective) ==== Translations ====