Crossword clues for tenon
tenon
- Part of wooden joint
- Part of joint composition makes comeback
- Bit of a joint eaten once, middle portion
- Joint's connective tissue died away
- Mortise filler
- Part of a dovetail
- Mortise-joint component
- It fits into a mortise
- Dovetail component
- Mortise connection
- Joint component
- Carpentry joint component, perhaps
- Mortise-joint part
- Half of a dovetail joint
- Wood joint
- Timber projection
- Projection used in a mortise joint
- Part of a mortise joint
- Mortise's woodworking mate
- Mortise's counterpart
- Mortise joiner
- Mortise go-with
- Mortise complement
- Half a dovetail
- Dovetailing piece
- Dovetail, for one
- Dovetail piece
- Dovetail feature
- Board projection
- Woodworking projection
- Wooden joint projection
- Wood-joint part
- Wood fitting into mortice
- Timber tab
- Partner of a mortise
- Part of some carpentry joints
- Part of dovetail joint
- Part of a woodworking joint
- Part of a cabinet joint
- Mortise's opposite
- Mortise joint
- Mortise fitter
- Mortise counterpart
- Joint — tonne (anag)
- Joinery element
- In a dovetail, it's the "male"
- Half of a joint
- Dovetail, e.g
- Dovetail joint component
- Component of a joint
- Carpentry insert
- Cutter for fine work
- Dovetail joint part
- Mortise insertion
- Part of a joint
- Mortise's mate
- Part of a furniture joint
- Part of a wood joint
- Join securely
- Dovetail part
- Part of some joints
- Joint part
- Part of a dovetail joint
- Mortise's partner, in carpentry
- Beam joiner
- Carpentry joint part
- Dovetail, e.g.
- It's inserted in a mortise
- Half a dovetail joint
- Part of a carpenter's joint
- Carpentry piece inserted into a mortise
- Construction piece with a mate
- It sticks out in some joints
- A projection at the end of a piece of wood that is shaped to fit into a mortise and form a mortise joint
- Mortise and ____
- Dovetail type
- Kind of auger
- Mortise companion
- Type of dovetail
- Mortise's adjunct
- This goes jointly with a mortise
- Dovetail wedge
- Joint projection
- Companion of a mortise
- Mortise mate
- Carpentry projection
- Fitted piece
- Mortise fitting
- Part of a carpentry joint
- Wood joint part
- Wood joiner
- Joining peg
- Carpenter's joint element
- Fitted joint
- Mortise adjacency
- Mortise adjunct
- Mortise's companion
- Wood-joint component
- Mortise partner
- Projecting part, in carpentry
- Endlessly intoned, rambling in wooden tongue
- Wooden projection shaped to fit in a mortise joint
- Retired musical group's section of joint
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Tenon \Ten"on\, n. [F., fr. tenir to hold. See Tenable.] (Carp. & Join.) A projecting member left by cutting away the wood around it, and made to insert into a mortise, and in this way secure together the parts of a frame; especially, such a member when it passes entirely through the thickness of the piece in which the mortise is cut, and shows on the other side. Cf. Tooth, Tusk.
Tenon saw, a saw with a thin blade, usually stiffened by a
brass or steel back, for cutting tenons. [Corruptly
written tenant saw.]
--Gwilt.
Tenon \Ten"on\, v. t. To cut or fit for insertion into a mortise, as the end of a piece of timber.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
projection inserted to make a joint, late 14c., from Middle French tenon "a tenon," from Old French tenir "to hold" (see tenet). As a verb from 1590s.
Wiktionary
n. A projecting member left by cutting away the wood around it, and made to insert into a mortise, and in this way secure together the parts of a frame. vb. To make a tenon
WordNet
n. a projection at the end of a piece of wood that is shaped to fit into a mortise and form a mortise joint
Wikipedia
Tenon may refer to:
- one of the two elements of a mortise and tenon joint
- Tenon Group, a chartered accountancy company in the United Kingdom
- Tenon Limited, a New Zealand based publicly traded company producing timber products
- Tenon Tours, an Ireland & Beyond Tour Operator based in Massachusetts.
- Jacques-René Tenon (1724-1816), a French surgeon
- Tenon saw a type of backsaw
Usage examples of "tenon".
Finally, they came flowing forth and I could feel them falling into place, mortise and tenon, key and lock.
She went up on tiptoe and he adjusted his head, and they meshed together splendidly, like some perfect mortise and tenon he might have fashioned to last two hundred years.
But when we see a lot of framed timbers, different portions of which we know have been gotten out at different times and places and by different workmen, Stephen, Franklin, Roger, and James, for instance, and when we see these timbers joined together, and see they exactly make the frame of a house or a mill, all the tenons and mortises exactly fitting, and all the lengths and proportions of the different pieces exactly adapted to their respective places, and not a piece too many or too few,--not omitting even scaffolding,--or, if a single piece be lacking, we see the place in the frame exactly fitted and prepared yet to bring such piece in,--in such a case, we find it impossible not to believe that Stephen and Franklin and Roger and James all understood one another from the beginning, and all worked upon a common plan or draft drawn up before the first blow was struck.
Franklin, Roger, and James, for instance,--and when we see these timbers joined together, and see they exactly make the frame of a house or a mill, all the tenons and mortises exactly fitting, and all the lengths and proportions of the different pieces exactly adapted to their respective places, and not a piece too many or too few,--not omitting even the scaffolding,--or if a single piece be lacking, we see the place in the frame exactly fitted and prepared yet to bring such piece in,--in such a case we feel it impossible not to believe that Stephen and Franklin and Roger and James all understood one another from the beginning, and all worked upon a common plan or draft drawn before the first blow was struck.
No material is used but riqimite, mortised and tenoned like wood, or set in exquisitely fitted blocks and courses.
The ripping off of the shelter that has kept out a thousand storms, the tearing off of the once ornamental woodwork, the wrench of the inexorable crowbar, the murderous blows of the axe, the progressive ruin, which ends by rending all the joints asunder and flinging the tenoned and mortised timbers into heaps that will be sawed and split to warm some new habitation as firewood,--what a brutal act of destruction it seems!
Once, right after he has moved in, the miller oils the cotter that holds the oak lever in place and retightens the keys in the tenons to do justice to the occasion: a miller has moved into a mill.
The ripping off of the shelter that has kept out a thousand storms, the tearing off of the once ornamental woodwork, the wrench of the inexorable crowbar, the murderous blows of the axe, the progressive ruin, which ends by rending all the joints asunder and flinging the tenoned and mortised timbers into heaps that will be sawed and split to warm some new habitation as firewood,--what a brutal act of destruction it seems!
No material is used but riqimite, mortised and tenoned like wood, or set in exquisitely fitted blocks and courses.
This was done by riveting, soldering, the use of tenons and dovetailing castellated edges.
In fact, when he looked closer, he could see the tenons were barely haunched - leaving scarcely enough timber at the top of the stile for wedging!
She went up on tiptoe and he adjusted his head, and they meshed together splendidly, like some perfect mortise and tenon he might have fashioned to last two hundred years.
I can spin, card, rett, Hallow and weave on the hand, frame, harp and Noble looms and I can knit if people start the wool on for me, I can read soil and rock, do carpentry up to the three-way mortise and tenon, predict weather by means of beastsign and skyreck, make increase in bees, brew five types of mead, make dyes and mordants and pigments, including a fast blue, I can do most types of whitesmithing, mend boots, cure and fashion most leathers, and if you have any goats I can look after them.
In join eries planes squealed, tenon saws rasped and hammers banged.
In her day they built with pegs and tenons instead of just trenails holding the strakes to the frames.