I think you mean tbl (L instead of 1), which is to knit through the back loop. (Regular knit stitch is through the front loop).
As you can access any other variable.Plus you can access the fields of the structure, with the dot operator.Plus there is the arrow operator to access the fields of a structure addressed by a pointer.Eg:struct timeb tb1, tb2, *ptb;tb1= tb2;ptb= &tb1;tb2= *ptb;tb1.time= tb2.time;tb2.time= (*ptb).timeptb->millitm= (&tb2)->millitm;
yrn is the abbreviation for 'yarn' - the material you are knitting or crocheting with
Grameen is the name of a knitting factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
slip
k1tbl1
No; the registration was abandoned in 2007.
A marker is a ring placed on a knitting needle between two stitches to remind the knitting that something is supposed to happen there.
"Main Color", usually.
You have to think if you're done or not.
In knitting, k2tog is an abbreviation for "Knit Two Stitches Together," or simply "Knit Two Together."
There are no abbreviations in knitting which uses "mds." The questioner may have meant to say "rnds" which means "rounds."
On a knitting chart, it symbolizes "yarn over" also, in some books/instructions, "yarn forward".