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twine <a twine; twines> N

twine

twine <a twine; twines> VB

twine <a twine; twines> N

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
We twisted the inner bark fibers into temporary rope, twine and fish nets.
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In the 18th century the parish was noted for flax growing and for the production of linen sailcloth and twine.
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They also wore smaller coolamons as hats, with the twine around the chin.
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The dried flower stalks, which are extremely light, were bound together with flax twine to make river rafts called mokihi.
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The piezoelectric nanowire is grown vertically on the two microfibers in its radial direction, and they are twined to form a nanogenerator.
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The smooth stem is erect or somewhat twining.
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They had a compass and a length of twine above the first clue to find the locations of the clues.
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At peak, he produced around of twine per week.
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Eventually the cloth strips became the core, wrapped in twine and covered by a finer cloth or felt hand-stitched around it.
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In present day production, small square balers can be ordered with twine knotters or wire tie knotters.
en.wikipedia.org

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