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Axe

 
(aks)

(design engineering) An implement consisting of a heavy metal wedge-shaped head with one or two cutting edges and a relatively long wooden handle; used for chopping wood and felling trees.


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Hand tool used for chopping, splitting, chipping, and piercing. Stone Age hand axes originated in simple stone implements that acquired wooden hafts, or handles, about 30,000 BC. Copper-bladed axes appeared in Egypt about 4000 BC and were followed by axes with blades of bronze and eventually iron. The development of the iron-bladed felling ax in the Middle Ages made possible the vast forest clearances of Europe, North and South America, and elsewhere. Though the ax has lost much of its historic role to powered saws and other machinery, it remains a widely used tool with many uses.

For more information on ax, visit Britannica.com.

noun

    The act of dismissing or the condition of being dismissed from employment: discharge, dismissal, termination. Slang boot, bounce, sack. See keep/release.

verb

    To end the employment or service of: cashier, discharge, dismiss, drop, release, terminate. Informal fire, pink-slip. Slang boot, bounce, can, sack. Idioms: give someone his or her walking papers, give someone the ax, give someone the gate, give someone the pink slip, let go, show someone the door. See keep/release.

Idioms beginning with ax:
ax to grind

In addition to the idiom beginning with ax, also see get the ax.


1. A sharp-edged steel tool for splitting wood, hewing timber, etc.
2. An axhammer.

ax, 1



[Ar]

Stone or metal cutting tool mounted on a wooden or bone haft with the cutting edge parallel to the haft.


axe

An axe was thrown by Tuirbe Trágmar from his Hill of Axe in the full of floodtide as a means of forbidding the sea to come beyond it. In the story Fled Bricrenn [Briccriu's Feast], the churl Cráebruad (Cú Roí in disguise) challenges the Ulster heroes to a beheading contest with an axe, a challenge which only Cúchulainn will accept.

The interest a person or trader shows in buying or selling a bond. A trader may have specific interest in a certain type of bond based on his or her existing positions.

Investopedia Says:
In a bond market, trader axes are matched up in order to execute a transaction.

Related Links:
They may not be sexy, but bonds do have a place in every balanced portfolio. Find out why. The Advantages Of Bonds
Investing in bonds - What are they, and do they belong in your portfolio? Bond Basics Tutorial


Word Tutor:

axe

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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: A tool used for chopping wood.

pronunciation Len needed to find the axe if he was going to chop the log into kindling.

Tutor's tip: "Ask" (request) permission before using an "ax"/"axe" (tool with a heavy head fixed to a handle) to cut firewood. You can use "axes" (tool for heavy chopping) to cut down trees. The earth spins on its "axis" (mathematical straight line).

LearnThatWord.com is a free vocabulary and spelling program where you only pay for results!

Random House Word Menu:

categories related to 'ax'

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Random House Word Menu by Stephen Glazier
For a list of words related to ax, see:

Double bit felling axes

The axe, or ax, is an implement that has been used for millennia to shape, split and cut wood; to harvest timber; as a weapon; and as a ceremonial or heraldic symbol. The axe has many forms and specialized uses but generally consists of an axe head with a handle, or helve.

The earliest examples of axes have heads of stone with some form of wooden handle attached (hafted) in a method to suit the available materials and use. Axes made of copper, bronze, iron, steel appeared as these technologies developed.

The axe is an example of a simple machine, as it is a type of wedge, or dual inclined plane. This reduces the effort needed by the wood chopper. It splits the wood into two parts by the pressure concentration at the blade. The handle of the axe also acts as a lever allowing the user to increase the force at the cutting edge—not using the full length of the handle is known as choking the axe. For fine chopping using a side axe this sometimes is a positive effect, but for felling with a double bitted axe it reduces efficiency. Generally, cutting axes have a shallow wedge angle, whereas splitting axes have a deeper angle. Most axes are double beveled, i.e. symmetrical about the axis of the blade, but some specialist broadaxes have a single bevel blade, and usually an offset handle that allows them to be used for finishing work without putting the user's knuckles at risk of injury. Less common today, they were once an integral part of a joiner and carpenter's tool kit, not just a tool for use in forestry. A tool of similar origin is the billhook. However in France and Holland the billhook often replaced the axe as a joiner's bench tool.[citation needed]

Most modern axes have steel heads and wooden handles, typically hickory in the US and ash in Europe, although plastic or fiberglass handles are also common. Modern axes are specialized by use, size and form. Hafted axes with short handles designed for use with one hand are often called hand axes but the term hand axe refers to axes without handles as well. Hatchets tend to be small hafted axes often with a hammer on the back side ( the poll). As easy to make weapons, axes have frequently been used in combat.

Contents

History

Roman axe in an ancient Roman relief in Brescia, Italy
A bronze axe from the Chinese Shang Dynasty, 12th to 11th centuries BC
Hand axes from Swanscombe at the British Museum that belongs to Swanscombe Man who lived 200.000-300.000 years ago

Initially axes were probably not hafted. The first true hafted axes are known from the Mesolithic period (ca. 6000 BC). Axes made from ground stone are known since the Neolithic. Few wooden hafts have been found from this period, but it seems that the axe was normally hafted by wedging. Birch-tar and raw-hide lashings were used to fix the blade.

Sometimes a short section of deer antler (an "antler sleeve") was used, which prevented the splitting of the haft and softened the impact on the stone blade itself, helping absorb the impact of each axe blow and lessening the chances of breaking the handle. The antler was hollowed out at one end to create a socket for the axehead. The antler sheath was then either perforated and a handle inserted into it or set in a hole made in the handle instead.

The distribution of stone axes is an important indication of prehistoric trade. Thin sectioning is used to determine the provenance of the stone blades. In Europe, Neolithic 'axe factories', where thousands of ground stone axes were roughed out are known from many places, such as:

  • Great Langdale, Great Britain (tuff)
  • Rathlin Island, Ireland (porcellanite)
  • Krzemionki, Poland (flint)
  • Plancher-les-Mines, France (pelite)
  • Val de'Aoste, Italy (omphacite).

Stone axes are still produced and in use today in parts of Irian Jaya, New Guinea. The Mount Hagen area was an important production centre.

From the late Neolithic/Chalcolithic onwards, axes were made of copper or copper mixed with arsenic. These axes were flat and hafted much like their stone predecessors. Axes continued to be made in this manner with the introduction of Bronze metallurgy. Eventually the hafting method changed and the flat axe developed into the ‘flanged axe,’ then palstaves, and later winged and socketed axes.

The Proto-Indo-European word for "axe" may have been pelek'u- (Greek pelekus πέλεκυς, Sanskrit parashu, see also Parashurama), but the word was probably a loan, or a Neolithic wanderwort, ultimately related to Sumerian balag, Akkadian pilaku- .[citation needed]

Symbolism, ritual, and folklore

At least since the late Neolithic, elaborate axes (battle-axes, T-axes, etc.) had a religious significance and probably indicated the exalted status of their owner. Certain types almost never show traces of wear; deposits of unshafted axe blades from the middle Neolithic (such as at the Somerset Levels in Britain) may have been gifts to the deities.

In Minoan Crete, the double axe (labrys) had a special significance, used by women priests in religious ceremonies. In 1998 a labrys, complete with an elaborately embellished haft, was found at Cham-Eslen, Canton of Zug, Switzerland. The haft was 120 cm long and wrapped in ornamented birch-bark. The axe blade is 17.4 cm long and made of antigorite, mined in the Gotthard-area. The haft goes through a biconical drilled hole and is fastened by wedges of antler and by birch-tar. It belongs to the early Cortaillod culture.

In the Roman fasces, the axe symbolized the authority to execute and were often used as symbols for Fascist Italy under Mussolini.

In folklore, stone axes were sometimes believed to be thunderbolts and were used to guard buildings against lightning, as it was believed (mythically) that lightning never struck the same place twice. This has caused some skewing of axe distributions.

Steel axes were important in superstition as well. A thrown axe could keep off a hailstorm, sometimes an axe was placed in the crops, with the cutting edge to the skies to protect the harvest against bad weather. An upright axe buried under the sill of a house would keep off witches, while an axe under the bed would assure male offspring.

A collection of old Australian axes

Basques, Australians and New Zealanders have developed variants of rural sports that perpetuate the traditions of log cutting with axe. The Basque variants, splitting horizontally or vertically disposed logs, are generically called aizkolaritza (from aizkora: axe).

In Yorùbá mythology, the oshe (double-headed axe) symbolizes Shango, Orisha (god) of thunder and lightning. It is said to represent swift and balanced justice. Shango altars often contain a carved figure of a woman holding a gift to the god with a double-bladed axe sticking up from her head.

Parts of the axe

A diagram showing the main points on an axe.

The axe has two primary components: the axe head, and the haft.

The axe head is typically bounded by the bit (or blade) at one end, and the poll (or butt) at the other, though some designs feature two bits opposite each other. The top corner of the bit where the cutting edge begins is called the toe, and the bottom corner is known as the heel. Either side of the head is called the cheek, which is sometimes supplemented by lugs where the head meets the haft, and the hole where the haft is mounted is called the eye. The part of the bit that descends below the rest of the axe-head is called the beard, and a bearded axe is an antiquated axe head with an exaggerated beard that can sometimes extend the cutting edge twice the height of the rest of the head.

The axe haft is sometimes called the handle. Traditionally, it was made of a resilient hardwood like hickory or ash, but modern axes often have hafts made of durable synthetic materials. Antique axes and their modern reproductions, like the tomahawk, often had a simple, straight haft with a circular cross-section that wedged onto the axe-head without the aid of wedges or pins. Modern hafts are curved for better grip and to aid in the swinging motion, and are mounted securely to the head. The shoulder is where the head mounts onto the haft, and this is either a long oval or rectangular cross-section of the haft that's secured to the axe head with small metal or wooden wedges. The belly of the haft is the longest part, where it bows in gently, and the throat is where it curves sharply down into to the short grip, just before end of the haft, which is known as the knob.

Forms of axes

Axes designed to cut or shape wood

Splitting axe
  • Felling axe – Cuts across the grain of wood, as in the felling of trees. In single or double bit (the bit is the cutting edge of the head) forms and many different weights, shapes, handle types and cutting geometries to match the characteristics of the material being cut. More so than with for instance a splitting axe, the bit of a felling axe needs to be very sharp, to be able to efficiently cut the fibres.
  • Splitting axe – Used to split with the grain of the wood. Splitting axe bits are more wedge shaped. This shape causes the axe to rend the fibres of the wood apart, without having to cut through them.
  • Broad axe – Used with the grain of the wood in precision splitting or "hewing" (i.e. the squaring-off of round timbers usually for use in construction). Broad axe bits are most commonly chisel-shaped (i.e. one flat and one beveled edge) facilitating more controlled work as the flat cheek passes across the squared timber.
  • Adze – A variation featuring a head perpendicular to that of an axe. Rather than splitting wood side-by-side, it is used to rip a level surface into a horizontal piece of wood.
  • Hatchet – A small, light axe designed for use in one hand specifically while camping or travelling.
  • Hand axe – A small axe used for intermediate chopping, similar to hatchets.
  • Mortising Axe - Used for creating mortises, a process which begins by drilling two holes at the ends of the intended mortise. Then the wood between the holes is removed with the mortising axe. Some forms of the tool have one blade, which may be pushed, swung or struck with a mallet. Others, such as twybil, bisaigüe and piochon have two, one of which is used for separating the fibres, and the other for levering out the waste. [1]

Axes as weapons

  • Battle axe – In its most common form, an arm-length weapon borne in one or both hands. Compared to a sword swing, it delivers more cleaving power against a smaller target area, making it more effective against armor, due to concentrating more of its weight in the axehead.
The execution of the Duke of Somerset after the Battle of Tewkesbury in 1471.
  • Tomahawk – used almost exclusively by Native Americans, its blade was originally crafted of stone. Along with the familiar war version, which could be fashioned as a throwing weapon, the pipe tomahawk was a ceremonial and diplomatic tool. A similar type of axe is the African nzappa zap. Tomahawks have made a resurgence among US military forces[citation needed].
  • Spontoon Tomahawk – A French trapper and Iroquois collaboration, this was an axe with a knife-like stabbing blade instead of the familiar wedged shape.
  • Shepherd's axe – used by shepherds in the Carpathian Mountains, it could double as a walking stick.
  • Ono – a Japanese weapon wielded by sōhei warrior monks.
  • Dagger-axe (Ji or Ge) – A variant of Chinese spearlike weapon with a divided two-part head, consisting of the usual straight blade and a scythe-like blade. The straight blade is used to stab or feint, then the foe's body or head may be cut by pulling the scythe-like horizontal blade backwards. Ge has the horizontal blade but does not have the straight spear.
  • Halberd – a spearlike weapon with a hooked poll, effective against mounted cavalry.
  • Pole axe – designed to defeat plate armour. Its axe (or hammer) head is much narrower than other axes, which accounts for its penetrating power.
  • Danish axe – A long-handled weapon with a large flat blade, often attributed to the Vikings.
  • Throwing axe – Any of a number of ranged weapons designed to strike with a similar splitting action as their Mêlée counterparts. These are often small in profile and usable with one hand.
  • Hurlbat – An entirely metal throwing axe sharpened on every auxiliary end to a point or blade, practically guaranteeing some form of damage against its target.
  • Francisca or Frankish axe – a short throwing weapon of the European Migration Period, the name of which may have become attached to the Germanic tribe associated with it: the Franks (see France).
  • Parashu - The parashu (Sanskrit: paraṣu) is an Indian battle-axe. It is generally wielded with two hands but could also be used with only one.

Axes as tools

Firefighter with a fire axe
Climbing axes from circa 1872
  • Firefighter's axe or fire axe – It has a pick-shaped pointed poll (area of the head opposite the cutting edge). It is often decorated in vivid colors to make it easily visible during an emergency. Its primary use is for breaking down doors and windows.
  • Pulaski – An axe with a mattock blade built into the rear of the main axe blade, used for digging ('grubbing out') through and around roots as well as chopping. In addition to the McCloud (a tool similar to a hoe/rake combination), the pulaski is an indispensable tool used in fighting forest fires, as well as trail-building, brush clearance and similar functions.
  • Splitting maul – A splitting implement that has evolved from the simple 'wedge' design to more complex designs. Some mauls have a conical 'axehead'; compound mauls have swiveling 'sub-wedges', among other types; others have a heavy wedge-shaped head, with a sledgehammer face opposite.
  • Slater's axe – An axe for cutting roofing slate, with a long point on the poll for punching nail holes, and with the blade offset laterally from the handle to protect the worker's hand from flying slate chips.
  • Ice axe or climbing axe – A number of different styles of ice axes are designed for ice climbing and enlarging steps used by climbers.

Hammer axe

Hammer axes (or axe-hammers) typically feature an extended pole, opposite the blade, shaped and sometimes hardened for use as a hammer. The name axe-hammer is often applied to a characteristic shape of perforated stone axe used in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages. Iron axe-hammers are found in Roman military contexts, e.g. Cramond, Edinburgh and South Shields, Tyne and Wear.

Today they are used in many different fields of work, completing all jobs from splitting wood to removing engines from vans. Tungsten is often added for weight as an upgrade, as well as six foot handles for the heavier jobs that require added force and "massive blows" such as cutting automobile frames, slicing brake rotors, rough body work, home construction, home de-construction, etc.

See also

Related Forestry Terms:

Literature

Neolithic axes

  • W. Borkowski, Krzemionki mining complex (Warszawa 1995)
  • P. Pétrequin, La hache de pierre: carrières vosgiennes et échanges de lames polies pendant le néolithique (5400 - 2100 av. J.-C.) (exposition musées d'Auxerre Musée d'Art et d'Histoire) (Paris, Ed. Errance, 1995).
  • R. Bradley/M. Edmonds, Interpreting the axe trade: production and exchange in Neolithic Britain (1993).
  • P. Pétrequin/A.M. Pétrequin, Écologie d'un outil: la hache de pierre en Irian Jaya (Indonésie). CNRS Éditions, Mongr. du Centre Rech. Arch. 12 (Paris 1993).

Medieval axes

  • Schulze, André(Hrsg.): Mittelalterliche Kampfesweisen. Band 2: Kriegshammer, Schild und Kolben. - Mainz am Rhein. : Zabern, 2007. - ISBN 3-8053-3736-1

Superstition

  • H. Bächtold-Stäubli, Handwörterbuch des deutschen Aberglaubens (Berlin, De Gruyter 1987).

References

  1. ^ Johan David. "Notes sur trois outils anciens du charpentier : le bondax, la bisaiguë, le piochon", Revue des archéologues et historiens d'art de Louvain 10. 1977.

External links


Translations:

Axe

Top

Dansk (Danish)
n. - økse
v. tr. - skære ned, hugge ned

idioms:

  • get the axe    blive fyret, få sparket, blive smidt ud
  • have an axe to grind    hyppe sine egne kartofler, mele sin egen kage

Nederlands (Dutch)
bijl, drastische bezuinigingen, ontslag, ontslaan, drastisch bezuinigen

Français (French)
n. - hache, (fig) coupe sombre, (Mus) guitare
v. tr. - annuler, abandonner (un projet), supprimer (des emplois), licencier

idioms:

  • get the axe    se faire renvoyer
  • have an axe to grind    prêcher pour sa paroisse

Deutsch (German)
n. - Axt, Beil, Rotstift, radikale Kürzung
v. - mit der Axt bearbeiten, radikal kürzen, aufgeben

idioms:

  • get the axe    entlassen werden
  • have an axe to grind    Privatinteressen verfolgen

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - πέλεκυς, τσεκούρι, (μτφ.) περικοπή, τσεκούρωμα
v. - περικόπτω (δραστικά), περιορίζω, πελεκώ, τσεκουρώνω, εγκαταλείπω, παρατώ

idioms:

  • get the axe    απολύομαι
  • have an axe to grind    (καθομ.) έχω προσωπικό ενδιαφέρον ή συμφέρον, έχω άλλα κατά νου

Italiano (Italian)
scure, accetta

idioms:

  • have an axe to grind    avere un chiodo fisso

Português (Portuguese)
n. - machado (m), machadinho (m)
v. - cortar a machadadas, machadar

idioms:

  • get the axe    ser despedido
  • have an axe to grind    tratar de interesses particulares, estar pessoalmente interessado

Русский (Russian)
топор

idioms:

  • get the axe    быть уволенным
  • have an axe to grind    преследовать корыстные цели

Español (Spanish)
n. - hacha
v. tr. - hachar, cortar con el hacha

idioms:

  • get the axe    quedar repentinamente sin empleo o sin medios
  • have an axe to grind    tener intereses personales

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - yxa
v. - dra in, skära ned, avskeda

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
斧, 大削减, 用斧将...削成形, 用斧修琢, 用斧砍断或劈开, 解雇, 大刀阔斧地消减开支, 撤消, 取消

idioms:

  • get the axe    被解雇
  • have an axe to grind    别有企图

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 斧, 大削減
v. tr. - 用斧將...削成形, 用斧修琢, 用斧砍斷或劈開, 解雇, 大刀闊斧地消減開支, 撤消, 取消

idioms:

  • get the axe    被解雇
  • have an axe to grind    別有企圖

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 도끼, 악기
v. tr. - ~을 자르다, ~를 삭감하다

idioms:

  • get the axe    해고당하다, 퇴교 당하다, 채이다, 삭감되다
  • have an axe to grind    딴 속셈이 있다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 斧, 首きり

idioms:

  • get the axe    首になる, 退学になる
  • have an axe to grind    胸に一物ある

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) فأس, (فعل) يقطع, يصرف من العمل, يقبل أو يزيل‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮גרזן, קיצוץ ניכר (בהוצאות וכו'), הפסקת פרויקט, כלי-נגינה במוסיקת ג'ז או פופ - (כעת) גיטרה‬
v. tr. - ‮קיצץ באופן ניכר (בשירותים, בסגל העובדים וכו'), פיטר, הפסיק ביצוע תוכנית‬


 
 

 

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