Wool is the fur of sheep. It is sheared off, cleaned, spun into threads and then woven into fabric. Somewhere in there it can also be dyed or bleached. Sometimes the wool is mixed up with other fibers to improve the properties of the finished product.
It is stolen from sheep.
Men, women and children all over the world make things with wool, as to many manufacturers, again world-wide.
Wool that has not been previously used in the manufacturing process
fleece and wool blankets, aluminum cans for baked bean storage
sheep manufacturing and pet rocks and pillow pets out of the sheep wool
Coal, mining, manufacturing, education, tourism. dairy products, wool, beef.
It is possible that a brand of Johns Manville Spintex rock wool insulation from the 1950s may contain asbestos. Asbestos was commonly used in insulation materials during that time period. To confirm if the specific product contains asbestos, it would be best to have it tested by a certified laboratory.
Dogs do not have wool. No types of dogs have wool.
Just about everything - advanced manufacturing capability for weapons, uniforms and footwear, and arable and livestock farms all over the North for food, leather and wool.
wool coats wool socks wool pants
A wool weaver are people who wool.
A wool sock is what it sounds like... A sock made from wool... You get wool from a sheep.
Collective nouns for wool are a bale of wool or a skein of wool.
A wool weaver is one who weaves with wool, fabricating cloth from wool yarn.