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  2. Hairpin lace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairpin_lace

    Hairpin lace is a lace-making technique that uses a crochet hook and two parallel metal rods held at the top and the bottom by removable bars. Historically, a metal U-shaped eponymous hairpin was used. Hairpin lace is formed by wrapping yarn around the prongs of the hairpin lace loom to form loops, which are held together by a row of crochet ...

  3. Coherent turbulent structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coherent_turbulent_structure

    Coherent turbulent structure. Turbulent flows are complex multi-scale and chaotic motions that need to be classified into more elementary components, referred to coherent turbulent structures. Such a structure must have temporal coherence, i.e. it must persist in its form for long enough periods that the methods of time-averaged statistics can ...

  4. Hairpin technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairpin_technology

    Hairpin technology is a winding technology for stators in electric motors and generators and is also used for traction applications in electric vehicles. In contrast to conventional winding technologies, the hairpin technology is based on solid, flat copper bars which are inserted into the stator stack.

  5. Hairpin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairpin

    A hairpin or hair pin is a long device used to hold a person's hair in place. It may be used simply to secure long hair out of the way for convenience or as part of an elaborate hairstyle or coiffure. The earliest evidence for dressing the hair may be seen in carved "Venus figurines" such as the Venus of Brassempouy and the Venus of Willendorf.

  6. Tenerife lace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenerife_lace

    A pink and green silk Tenerife needle lace piece. Tenerife lace or "roseta canaria" is a needle lace from Canary Islands. The first name comes from the fact that the lace made on the islands (Lanzarote and Tenerife) was exported from that island. The origin of this lace is uncertain and it is not known on which island the technique was born.

  7. Stem-loop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stem-loop

    Stem-loop. Stem-loop intramolecular base pairing is a pattern that can occur in single-stranded RNA. The structure is also known as a hairpin or hairpin loop. It occurs when two regions of the same strand, usually complementary in nucleotide sequence when read in opposite directions, base-pair to form a double helix that ends in an unpaired loop.

  8. Hairpin turn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairpin_turn

    A hairpin turn (also hairpin bend or hairpin corner) is a bend in a road with a very acute inner angle, making it necessary for an oncoming vehicle to turn about 180° to continue on the road. It is named for its resemblance to a bent metal hairpin. Such turns in ramps and trails may be called switchbacks in American English, by analogy with ...

  9. Waist cincher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waist_cincher

    Waist cincher. A short corset, 1860, of one part. A waist cincher (sometimes referred to as a waspie) is a belt worn around the waist to make the wearer's waist physically smaller, or to create the illusion of being smaller.