Spinning

  • (noun): Creating thread.
    See also — Additional definitions below

Some articles on spinning:

List Of Mills Owned By The Lancashire Cotton Corporation Limited - See Also
... processes Textile manufacturing Cotton-spinning machinery Dref Friction Spinning Magnetic ring spinning Open end spinning Ring spinning Spinning frame ...
Spinning Top (candlestick Pattern)
... Spinning top is a Japanese candlesticks pattern with a short body found in the middle of two long wicks ... A spinning top is indicative of a situation where neither the buyers nor the sellers have won for that time period, as the market has closed relatively ... When a spinning top forms after a run up or run down in the market, it can be an indication of a pending reversal, as the indecision in the market is ...
Spinning Cone - Wine Controversy
... Some producers feel that this unbalances their wine, and use spinning cones to reduce the alcohol by 1-2 percentage points ... argue that technological "fixes" such as spinning cones remove a sense of terroir from the wine if the wine has the tannins and other components to balance 15% alcohol, Peterson argues that ... The use of spinning cones, and other technologies such as reverse osmosis, was banned in the EU until recently, although for many years they could ...
Spinning (polymers)
... Spinning is manufacturing process for creating polymer fibers ... There are four types of spinning wet, dry, melt, and gel spinning ...
Shimo-fukushima Park
... The park was constructed at the former spinning factory of Dai-Nihon Spinning Company (current company is Unitika, Ltd.), and largest in Fukushima ward ... In the park, spinning factory's old brick wall constructed around 1894 is still remained, which stops the fire spread of air raid at the World War II ...

More definitions of "spinning":

  • (adj): Rotating rapidly about an axis.
    Example: "A spinning top"
    Synonyms: whirling

Famous quotes containing the word spinning:

    The end of all stories, even if the writer forebears to mention it, is death, which is where time stops short. Sheherezade knew this, which is why she kept on spinning another story out of the bowels of the last one, never coming to a point where she could say: “This is the end.” Because it would have been.
    Angela Carter (1940–1992)

    I claim that in losing the spinning wheel we lost our left lung. We are, therefore, suffering from galloping consumption. The restoration of the wheel arrests the progress of the fell disease.
    Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869–1948)

    I, a spinning man,
    Glory also this star, bird
    Roared, sea born, man torn, blood blest.
    Dylan Thomas (1914–1953)