Harris Tweed
Kilt.
a weaver of a special kind of thick, woolen cloth known as fear nought
Tweed
A fuller was a person who fulled woolen cloth. This involved making the cloth thicker by causing it to felt or mat, by washing or beating it. This process made the cloth more thick or full, hence the words fulling and fuller.
Yes, woolen cloth can be charged by friction due to its ability to gain or lose electrons when rubbed against another material. This can result in a build-up of static electricity on the woolen cloth.
The ebonite rod acquires a negative charge when rubbed with woolen cloth because electrons are transferred from the woolen cloth to the ebonite rod.
Rubbing a glass ruler on a woolen cloth will create a static charge on the ruler due to the triboelectric effect, where electrons transfer between the materials. The glass ruler will become negatively charged as it gains electrons from the woolen cloth, resulting in static attraction to objects with a positive charge.
flanders
Brocade
Flanders
The balloon will have static electricity after being rubbed on the woolen cloth. This results from the transfer of electrons between the balloon and the cloth, causing the balloon to become negatively charged.
cloth is an insulator but woolen cloth is a better insulator. I guess the whatever depends on the cloth quality dude.