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___ saw (carpenter's curve cutter)
Answer for the clue "___ saw (carpenter's curve cutter) ", 6 letters:
coping
Alternative clues for the word coping
Word definitions for coping in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Coping or scribing is the woodworking technique of shaping the end of a moulding or frame component to neatly fit the contours of an abutting member. Joining tubular members in metalworking is also referred to as a cope, or sometimes a "fish mouth joint" ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1600 as an architectural term, from cope (n.), the cape-like vestment worn by priests (14c.), a variant of cape . Coping saw attested by 1931.
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (lb en architecture) The top layer of a brick wall, especially one that slopes in order to throw off water. 2 (lb en psychology) The process of managing taxing circumstances, expending effort to solve personal and interpersonal problems, and seeking ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES a coping strategy ▪ Therapists can show a child new coping strategies. EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ As an adult, Jenny admits to the same way of coping . ▪ At both stages, coping can have behavioural and psychological aspects. ...
Usage examples of coping.
I stood there a long time, one foot upon the coping and my chin upon my hand, noting the beauty of the ruined town and wondering how such a feeble race as that which lay about, breakfasting in the limpid sunshine, could have come by a city like this, or kept even the ruins of its walls and buildings from the covetousness of others, until presently there was a rustle of primrose garments and my friend of the day before stood by me.
The cenote lay below a ridge which was thickly covered in trees and Rider was worried about the problem of getting in while coping with air currents.
British women, formerly ladies of leisure employing cooks, dhobis and ayas, found themselves coping with all the tasks usually performed by these servants.
Mad dogs and Englishmen may go out in the midday sun, but an ectothermic animal has trouble coping with its rise in body temperature.
Just then we came to a ditch about ten feet wide, and full of water, on the other side of which was a loopholed stone wall eight feet high, and with sharp flints plentifully set in mortar on the coping.
But I assure you that highly skilled kinetics are going to have trouble coping with this sort of thing, and all I have are a handful of fourteen-year-old trainee kinetics.
It was open, but there was little to be seen from it, for immediately opposite rose a high old garden-wall, hiding every thing with its gray bulk, lovelily blotted with lichens and moss, brown and green and gold, except the wall-flowers and stone-crop that grew on its coping, and a running plant that hung down over it, like a long fringe worn thin.
He heard Lowry coping, asking her, patiently, to recite everything she knew on the subject of the care and welfare of Royal sorkis, and he had to grin, wryly.
My guess was the people of Nota Lake, like others in perpetually cold climates, had strategies for coping with the shifting character of snow.
Umslopogaas ran to the wall, and, reaching with his long arms to the coping, lifted his head above it and gazed over.
It had created a small scandal, and her new chief of staff, a man of as yet unobvious talents, was barely coping.
He did not go in at the door of the house, but turned sideways along the ledge below the balustrade, stopping at the object which had been fastened by the woman to the coping of the balcony.
The whole building, from the pavement to the coping, notched to receive the roof-joists, is of alabaster, plain-white and streaked with ruddy, mauve, and dark bands, whose mottling gives the effect of marble.
By combining their individual intelligences they succeed in coping with adverse circumstances, even quite unforeseen and unusual, like those bees of the Paris Exhibition which fastened with their resinous propolis the shutter to a glass-plate fitted in the wall of their hive.
She was as tall as any woman of the hundred families, whose geneticists had concentrated on enhancing sturdiness so their descendants could comfortably spend a lifetime coping with the arduous conditions of spaceflight.