| The process of pressing or matting together various types of hair or fibers to form a continuous fabric, known as felt.
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| Federal Emergency Management Agency.
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| Inside threads in a pipe or fitting.
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| A rotating drill with a screw thread used to drill deep, straight, and narrow holes for the installation of fence posts.
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| 1. An opening in a fence. 2. A hinged or sliding panel in a fence.
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| A hole in the ground where the main vertical support is inserted in the construction of a fence or wall.
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| A cylindrical hole dug in the ground, for the insertion of a fence post.
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| The act or process of reusing old fence boards and other fencing materials in a new fence application.
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| 1. A barrier used to prevent escape or intrusion or to mark a boundary, usually made of posts, boards or wire. 2. In a cast plaster shop, a plaster or clay damplaced around a model before pouring material to make the mould.
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| Outside row of piles that protects a pier or wharf from damage by ships.
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| The arrangement, proportioning, and design of windows and doors in a building.
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| Chinese cultural system for siting, arranging, and shaping buildings.
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| Reinforced concrete.
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| Metal alloy containing iron;ferrous pipes include wrought iron, wrought steel, rolled steel and cast iron.
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| A green pigment commonly known as copperas.
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| Being iron or containing iron
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| 1. A metal band, ring, or cap, such as found on a tool handle to prevent splitting. 2. A cast-iron pipe fitting which, when installed in the bell of a cast-iron pipe, permits a threaded cleanout to close the opening.
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| The act or process of adding a substance, such as manure or a chemical mixture, in order to make soil more fertile.
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| An aerial span of conductors installed outdoors and supplying only weatherproof lampholders attached thereto.
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| 1. Flat Grain. 2. Foundation Grade. 3. Fuel Gas. 4. Finish Grade.
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| Flat Glass Marketing Association.
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| Federal Housing Administration.
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| Flat Head Machine Screw.
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| Flat Head Wood Screw.
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| The stage in the drying or wetting of wood at which the cell walls are saturated and the cell cavities free from water; it applies to an individual cell or group of cells, not to whole boards; it is usually taken as approximately 30 percent moisture content, based on ovendry weight.
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| 1. In wood, a comparatively long, narrow, tapering wood cell, closed at both ends; also called a Tracheid. 2. An additive such as glass or cellulosic fiber to improve core flexibility and gypsum board core integrity. 3. Animal hair, sisal, manila, or glass fibers of appropriate length added to plaster mortar to increase its cohesiveness.
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| Insulation sheets made from wood or cane fibers.
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| Flat sheet material made from wood that has been rced to fibers and bonded through either a wet or dry process to obtain a specific density.
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| Exterior sheathing manufactured from wood or cane fibers.
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| Flat sheet material of fiberboard secured to exterior side of exterior wall studs used to create rigidity in building superstructure and serve as base to receive siding or veneer construction.
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