I have been looking for one, and I have found someone who calls it a receipt spike. Sounds good to me.
You can also find it when you search online under bill spike.
It is called a Spindle.
Otis: There is also a receipt holder called BillBandit. More functional than the "Receipt Spike".
It is a metal plate that sticks to the wall with 5 (removable) tags, with 5 strings attached to these tags. Simply pierce your receipts onto one of the five strings ( which can be labelled for specific receipts, i.e groceries, petrol ), and they are there in chronological order.
Hope this helps.
Yes
Long, narrow strips of wood or metal.
yes, Easy of flow of current increases with increase of area of cross section.
Put the key into the helmet holder and release. There is a metal bar that is inserted into the helmet holder, pull this metal bar out by the back (it is hinged on by the front). Then on the back of the helmet holder, there is a handle that you push in which release the seat, pull the seat backwards and up, and it is off!
The metal tip of a light bulb has to make contact with the bottom of the lamp holder's middle center contact to operate.
The likely word is "trivet" (a metal holder or stand, typically with three legs).
It magnifyes the light into a room.
It is a hacksaw, which is a narrow fine-toothed blade set in a frame.
It's called a dowel.
William Theodore Brannt has written: 'The metal worker's handy-book of receipts and processes' -- subject(s): Metals, Metal-work 'The metallic alloys' -- subject(s): Alloys
The testube holds liquids and other scientific substances. It can be held between two metal prongs known as a testube holder. Often, a testube holder raises the testube over a bunsen burner (an open flame).
Zarf. It's an ornamental metal cup-shaped holder.