spin
Further, many states with different spins and different oxidation states are usually involved. From the Cambridge English Corpus
A gathering of🗝 women for the purpose of spinning cotton. From the Cambridge English Corpus
The primary objective in this case was to reinvigorate🗝 cottage industry by allowing farmers to purchase the materials and equipment necessary for spinning at home. From the Cambridge English🗝 Corpus
The investigation of cotton spinning mills, above, provides a clue to estimating the amount of such extra income. From the🗝 Cambridge English Corpus
In the first a spinning wheel was made from a small dish and different objects were placed on🗝 it and spun around. From the Cambridge English Corpus
Figure 2(b) shows the state of the spinning gait after the completion🗝 of one cycle. From the Cambridge English Corpus
I think in any profession, most of the people will be spinning their🗝 wheels, unfortunately. From the Cambridge English Corpus
The terminal velocity and dispersal of spinning samaras. From the Cambridge English Corpus
All antibody🗝 dilutions were spun at 10000 g for 5 min before use. From the Cambridge English Corpus
Given that such beads were🗝 more usually worn by women and that spinning was usually carried out by women, they are gendered as possibly 'female?'.🗝 From the Cambridge English Corpus
When the primary axle is spinning and is in such contact with the track, it can🗝 be either rolling or sliding on the track. From the Cambridge English Corpus
As the stock-market novel of the "sensational sixties"🗝 capitalized on villainous speculators, it undoubtedly continued to create typecast crooks but also stimulated spins on them. From the Cambridge🗝 English Corpus
Morphological attributes of the spindle whorls were analyzed to determine the size of the thread that was spun. From🗝 the Cambridge English Corpus
The workshops processed maguey fibers and made maguey spindle whorls in a range of sizes for spinning🗝 thin and thick threads and cordage. From the Cambridge English Corpus
He showed that a thin shell full of water spins🗝 stably when slightly oblate but is violently unstable when slightly prolate. From the Cambridge English Corpus
These examples are from corpora🗝 and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary🗝 editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.