Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Workbench adjunct ", 4 letters:
vise

Alternative clues for the word vise

Word definitions for vise in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a holding device attached to a workbench; has two jaws to hold workpiece firmly in place [syn: bench vise ]

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Visé (; , ) is a municipality and city of Belgium , where it is located on the river Meuse , in the Walloon province of Liège . The municipality consists of the former municipalities of Visé, Lanaye (Ternaaien), Lixhe (Lieze), Richelle , Argenteau , and ...

Usage examples of vise.

He saw his goal near and stretched his legs outward to lock the prince in the steely vise of his thighs, but a warning shout from one of the men alerted Aleksei, who, upon espying the imminent threat, gasped in sudden alarm and stumbled back from the dangerously encroaching limbs.

The all-important gem sat snug between the jaws of the vise all the way, with either himself or Lowry constantly in attendance on it, just in case.

While Bill obeyed, Roger wrapped several turns of wire around the spark plug, and then he put it, together with the magneto, between the open jaws of the vise.

Cluthe Truss as different from all other trusses as a scientific balance is to a vise.

Reaching the inner room in due course, I saluted three uniformed men who sat round an unimposing wooden table, exhibited the vise that Jack Herriott had secured for me at Genoa, and was welcomed to the land.

From left to right it featured a series of vises and clamps to give him the gripping or clasping ability now denied to him through the loss of his left arm and hand.

He was about the fattest man that Vickers had ever seen, an emotional baby with a mind like a vise who had long ago abandoned all ideas except power and gluttony.

It pulled its rear up in a great arch, vised its prolegs into the hard earth, took the weight of its forebody, and with a flail lifted it, straightening the tube of bodiness, the humanish torso high at the end of outstretched grub physiognomy that batted uncertainly at the air, then onto the spongy caterpillar forelegs.

The smell of hot steel hung sharply on the air, and the walls were lined with all manner of tools: pincers and vises, hammers and bellows.

No matter which he attacked first, both of the others would be in a position to counterstrike from behind, take a surprise move, and trap his remaining monster in an inescapable vise.

Cut it into five-inch chunks, use a vise to bend a hook into one end, hook it over the crossbar, run it through a hole in the center of the bowl and use a wingnut to hold the bowl down.

He was all bent by years and hard work, with muscles of iron, hands gnarled and lumpy, but clinching like a vise.

Master Jerint, bent over a vise attached to his wide and cluttered worktable, was the only occupant of the big room.

On the arrival of Anjou’s widow to establish her son’s claims in Provence, he visited her several times (presumably in a litter), ad­ vised her in the matter of Pierre de Craon, and “comforted her as best he could.

When Darfur had grasped him around the back above the waist and locked his arms like a vise, Giordino had lifted his arms so that they were free and stretched in the air above the giant's head.