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If you mean a regular slip knot, I can help. You start out by looping a strand of yarn around your finger. Then,you slip it off, keeping the loop intact. You take string from the yarn on the right side of the loop and lay it across the loop. Pull it through the loop, closing it. The yarn should be poking out, and should closely resemble a noose. And then, you're done. As a cautionary note, I would like to add that if you pull on either side of the knot at once, then the knot will slip apart, hence the name 'slip knot.' So, be careful!
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For a figure 8 knot, one passes the tail of the rope over itself to create a loop. Then, continue it under and around the other end and pass the tail through the loop to create the knot. However, in a figure 9 knot, one must create a bight, and the knot is more complicated than a figure 8 knot.
The bowline is used to form a loop large enough to sit in. The "tied-off" end can be any knot that will not slip.
A loop colostomy is most often performed for creation of a temporary stoma to divert stool away from an area of intestine that has been blocked or ruptured.
I think you mean "Noose". Noose is a certain type of knot commonly know for its use as a execution device.Definition from http:/enzperiodzwikipediazperiodzorg/wiki/Noose:A noose is a loop at the end of a rope in which the knot slides to make the loop collapsible.
The Sailor's Knot is one of the most commonly used knots to tie two pieces of line together. It may also be adapted to fasten a line to a pole. To tie a Sailor's Knot, make a loop with the first piece of line, then run the second piece of line over the loop, around the back of one end of the first line, through the trunk of the line, over the second end of the first line, and then through the first loop. There you have a Sailor's Knot. See Related links for an animated picture of this knot.
Betsy Ross would tie her shoe by creating a loop with one lace, then crossing the other lace over the loop and pulling it through to make a knot.
Homonyms of "not" are "knot" & "naught". All three have different meanings.
Simply stated, it used for creating a fixed loop in the middle of a rope or line. Tied in the bight, it can be made in the rope without access to either end. Climbers use it for shortening slings, traverse lines, and "some" anchors. it may also be known as a butterfly loop, lineman's loop, lineman's rider, or the alpine butterfly knot.
Knot.
Different knots for different occasions! The one i use most is the bowline, which is a loop.