True.
A guillotine was the machine that was used to behead criminals in France. It was an apparatus designed for efficiently carrying out executions by beheading.
The guillotine was the device designed for carrying out executions by beheading. The structure of the device involves a tall, heavy frame from which an angled blade is suspended, with a movable collar at the bottom which holds the neck of the prisoner in place. Various forms of the guillotine have been in use since the 14th century but the French refined it, introducing the angled blade and using the device almost exclusively for executions until 1977. The guillotine was proposed by Doctor Joseph-Ignace Guillotin, a member of the Revolutionary National Assembly, in the early 1790s, because he felt that a mechanical device for execution would be more humane. A member of the Academy of Surgeons, Antoine Louis, designed a functional guillotine, initially called a louison or louisette, which was first used on 25 April 1792.
The engineering firm Beca Group not only provided the design management and coordination but also structural, geotechnical, civil, mechanical, electrical, Plumbing, lighting and fire engineering services. Craig Craig Moller Ltd. was the architect for this project.
It was designed in 1958 by Gerald Holtom
chinese people designed thhe oprah house
false
True
The device created specifically for beheading people more efficiently during the Reign of Terror was the guillotine. It was a mechanical apparatus that used a sharp blade to swiftly decapitate individuals. The guillotine was designed to be quick, humane (compared to previous execution methods), and widely adopted during the French Revolution.
we don't know who designed the guillotine but Dr Joseph Ignace Guillotine was the lobbyist for it and said they would benefit from execution of people
An antonym is a word opposite in meaning of another word. There are no antonyms for the word guillotine (a machine designed for carrying out executions by beheading).
A guillotine was the machine that was used to behead criminals in France. It was an apparatus designed for efficiently carrying out executions by beheading.
It was in the 18th century that the guillotine was introduced, during the French Revolution. The guillotine was designed to be more humane in contrast to other forms of execution and torture at the time such as burning at the stake, beheading by axe, and death by the breaking wheel. For minor crimes people were subject to public whipping, branding, put in stocks, or the pillory.
The guillotine was the device designed for carrying out executions by beheading. The structure of the device involves a tall, heavy frame from which an angled blade is suspended, with a movable collar at the bottom which holds the neck of the prisoner in place. Various forms of the guillotine have been in use since the 14th century but the French refined it, introducing the angled blade and using the device almost exclusively for executions until 1977. The guillotine was proposed by Doctor Joseph-Ignace Guillotin, a member of the Revolutionary National Assembly, in the early 1790s, because he felt that a mechanical device for execution would be more humane. A member of the Academy of Surgeons, Antoine Louis, designed a functional guillotine, initially called a louison or louisette, which was first used on 25 April 1792.
WORD HISTORY "At half past 12 the guillotine severed her head from her body." So reads the statement containing the first recorded use of guillotine in English, found in the Annual Register of 1793. Ironically, the guillotine, which became the most notable symbol of the excesses of the French Revolution, was named for a humanitarian physician, Joseph Ignace Guillotin. Guillotin, a member of the French Constituent Assembly, recommended in a speech to that body on October 10, 1789, that executions be performed by a beheading device rather than by hanging, the method used for commoners, or by the sword, reserved for the nobility. He argued that beheading by machine was quicker and less painful than the work of the rope and the sword. In 1791 the Assembly did indeed adopt beheading by machine as the state's preferred method of execution. A beheading device designed by Dr. Antoine Louis, secretary of the College of Surgeons, was first used on April 25, 1792, to execute a highwayman named Pelletier or Peletier. The device was called a louisette or louison after its inventor's name, but because of Guillotin's famous speech, his name became irrevocably associated with the machine. After Guillotin's death in 1814, his children tried unsuccessfully to get the device's name changed. When their efforts failed, they were allowed to change their name instead. http://www.answers.com/topic/guillotine
The word for the execution device, guillotine, originated in France.Early devices like the guillotine were used in Ireland, England, and Italy in the 14th and 15th centuries. They had names like the Italian mannaia, the Scottish maiden, and the Halifax gibbet and may pre-date the French guillotine by as much as 500 years.The device used in France was named for Dr. Joseph-Ignace Guillotin. Dr. Guillotin did not invent the machine; he was a medical doctor and lawmaker who proposed that the death penalty in France should be equal for all, regardless of social rank or the nature of the crime. He proposed that the death penalty should be carried out by a quick mechanical device to eliminate suffering. His proposal was adopted by the National Assembly in 1781, making the death penalty 'by mechanical decapitation' the law in the Kingdom of France. The ministry of justice contracted to have the device designed and built and the resulting device was named after the humane Dr. Guillotin.
A mechanical bush is a cylindrical lining designed to reduce friction and wear, or constrict and restrain motion of mechanical parts.
The transmission