It is a precaution that people who live in flood risk areas take--keeping an axe handy in the attic-- so they can hack their way to the roof in case rising flood waters trap them under the eaves.
This phrase refers to the practice of keeping axes and other tools and supplies in the attic to chop a hole in the roof to climb out of a house in the event of a catastrophic flood, i.e., Hurricane Katrina.
This phrase refers to the practice of keeping axes and other tools and supplies in the attic to chop a hole in the roof to climb out of a house in the event of a catastrophic flood, i.e., Hurricane Katrina.
To cut wood.
Axes, adzes, chisels, hammers, crude saws would all have been common then.
People were poor and common people would use simple weapons when their Lord called them to war. Many would take their Axes, large hammers and long knives .
they would need knives axes
Axes, bows and arrows, and spheres
That depends on what you have chosen for the axes. If one of the axes is enthalpy, then an adiabatic line would be a straight line perpendicular to that axis.
The axes
axes, sharpened sticks, arrows
People began using axes during the Stone Age, around 6,000 to 8,000 years ago, with the earliest known examples being made from stone. These early axes were primarily used for chopping wood and hunting. The advent of metalworking in the Bronze Age around 3,300 BCE led to the creation of bronze axes, which further improved their effectiveness and durability. Over time, axes evolved into various forms, becoming essential tools in agriculture, construction, and warfare.
Well the three axes for an airplane are known as the vertical axes (which governs the yaw of the plane), the Longitudinal axes (govenrs the roll of the plane), at the lateral axes (govenrs the pitch)