Hazel is used as hoops to keep the reeds secured in place for a thatched roof.
To hold your bits of material in place while you sew them together
a bandage is a strip of material used to hold the dressing in place...
You can use different items to hold something in place, such as nails, screws, clamps, adhesive tape, or glue, depending on the material you are working with and the level of permanence required.
Nuts.
Most of the material is either made up of porcelain or gold. It is combined with other materials such as composite resin or glass ionomer cement to help hold it in place.
Hold in place for 10 seconds.
timber frame work to hold up the ceiling and and straw or grasses for the roof
A bandage is a strip of material used to hold the dressing in place, while a dressing is a protective cover that's placed over a wound.
Yes, it is a noun. It means a place where material or objects collect.
Unlike wood, steel will not rot. It will hold in place, and not blow off very easily. Steel proves to be a very strong and long lasting material. It is also able to with hold many weather conditions.
Hooke's law does not hold beyond the elastic limit of a material. Once a material is deformed beyond this point, it will not return to its original shape when the stress is removed. Instead, the material will exhibit plastic deformation and may eventually fail.
A single reed is one piece of wood (normally bamboo) that needs something to vibrate against to create sound. A clarinet or saxophone are single reed instruments, and they both have a mouthpiece, single reed, and ligature to hold the reed against the mouthpiece so it can vibrate. A double reed is two reeds that are like a sandwich and they vibrate against each other, so they don't need a mouthpiece or ligature. An oboe or bassoon use double reeds, and double reeds are harder to blow on than single reeds.