a bellows mender is someone who fixes the leather sack on the bellow its self and is used for forcing air into the black smiths factory.
thankyou
A Bourdon Tube or a Bellows gauge
The bellow was invented in the European Middle ages by blacksmiths. They are used to push oxygen into the fire, therefore fueling the fire and making it hotter.
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it means BROTHER
That depends on the context. For instance, when using a number in certain programming languages (such as Java, or Python 2.x), it may mean that the number should be treated as a "long".
Bellows mender
a bellows mender is someone who fixes the leather sack on the bellow its self and is used for forcing air into the black smiths factory. thankyou
A bellows-mender is someone who repairs bellows, the instrument which puffs air into a fire to make it hotter. The bellows consists of two hinged pieces of wood with a leather bag attached to them, and the leather of the hinges and the bag was always wearing out.
A bellows-mender would use tools such as a sewing awl, waxed thread, leather patches, a cutting tool, and a leather glue to repair and mend damaged bellows. These tools help ensure a tight and long-lasting seal to maintain proper airflow for the bellows.
Francis Flute, the bellows-mender.
Francis Flute, the bellows-mender.
Flute, who played the part of Thisbe in the Pyramus and Thisbe play.
Bellows mender
Nick Bottom, a weaver, takes up the role of the bellows-mender in the play within a play performed by the craftsmen in "A Midsummer Night's Dream." He is one of the comic and bumbling characters in the play.
A bellows is an air pump . A pump organ would have a bellows . A poet might conceivably use bellows as a figure of speech to stand for a pump organ.
Nick Bottom the Weaver, Francis Flute the Bellows Mender, Peter Quince the carpenter (the playwright and director), Tom Snout the tinker, Robin Starveling the Tailor, and Snug, the joiner.
A shoe mender is called as cobbler