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Shipbuilding tool
Answer for the clue "Shipbuilding tool ", 4 letters:
adze
Alternative clues for the word adze
Word definitions for adze in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A cutting tool that has a curved blade set at a right angle to the handle and is used in shaping wood. vb. To shape a material using an adze.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
also adz , "cutting tool resembling an axe, but with a curved blade at a right-angle to the handle, used for dressing timber," 18c. spelling modification of ads , addes , from Middle English adese , adse , from Old English adesa "adze, hatchet," which is ...
Usage examples of adze.
This human cargo represents a weight of about twenty tons, which is equivalent to that of thirty persons, two boars, three sows, twelve piglets, thirty fowls, ten dogs, twenty rats, a hundred balled or potted breadfruit and banana plants, and twelve tons of watergourds, seeds, yams, tubers, coconuts, adzes and weapons.
Cooks, New Zealand, and Hawaii all possessed adzes and other cultural features of Eastern Polynesian type.
Duff, a New Zealand anthropologist who has made a special study of adze distributions, claiming that no adzes with butts tanged as an aid in lashing the handles have been established for Western Polynesia, whereas tanged adzes have been found throughout Eastern Polynesia, has argued that this is not in accord with what one would expect from random voyaging.
Obviously, therefore, there must have been some explanation for the absence of tanged adzes from Western Polynesia other than that random voyages did not occur.
Apparently handfuls of migrants from Eastern Polynesia failed to establish the tanging of adzes among the conservative Western Polynesians.
A number of archaeologists have concluded that the tanging of adzes was brought to Polynesia by migrants from the west, although tanging is not typical of Western Polynesian, Melanesian or Micronesian adzes.
Perhaps the best view of all, however, is that after the early settlers of Eastern Polynesia were released from the conservative influence of Western Polynesian technology, they tanged some of their adzes and made other innovations in their artifacts.
These relics included an enclosure of coral blocks marking the outlines of a rectangular building which, Emory and Finney considered, showed similarities to some Tongan structures, and basalt adzes which must have come from a high volcanic island, since basalt does not occur naturally on low atolls.
No adzes made of the local tridacna shell, such as were used on most inhabited atolls, were found on Fanning.
The adzes bore resemblances to those of various inhabited Polynesian islands.
It would just be me and her on a high hill and me rolling the rocks down the hill faces and teeth and all by God until she was quiet and not that goddamn adze going One lick less.
After shaping the slope of the barrel chime of yet another red oak slack barrel, Kharl set the adze down and blotted his forehead with the back of his forearm.
The man lurched back, one hand grasping, then pulling at the adze wedged in his shoulder.
Kharl set the adze down and blotted his forehead with the back of his forearm.
This could also have happened in New Zealand, where a variety of archaic adze types has been found.