Kettle-stitch
noun, Bookbinding.
1.
(in handsewing) a knot tied in the thread that links one section to the next.
Read Also:
- Ketubah
[Ashkenazic Hebrew, English kuh-too-buh; Sephardic Hebrew kuh-too-bah] /Ashkenazic Hebrew, English kəˈtu bə; Sephardic Hebrew kə tuˈbɑ/ noun, plural ketuboth, ketubot, ketubos [Ashkenazic Hebrew kuh-too-bohs; Sephardic Hebrew kuh-too-bawt] /Ashkenazic Hebrew kəˈtu boʊs; Sephardic Hebrew kə tuˈbɔt/ (Show IPA). English, ketubahs. Hebrew. 1. the formal contract in a Jewish religious marriage that includes specific financial protection for […]
- Keturah
[ki-too r-uh] /kɪˈtʊər ə/ noun 1. the second wife of Abraham. Gen. 25:1. incense, the wife of Abraham, whom he married probably after Sarah’s death (Gen. 25:1-6), by whom he had six sons, whom he sent away into the east country. Her nationality is unknown. She is styled “Abraham’s concubine” (1 Chr. 1:32). Through the […]
- Ketuvim
[Sephardic Hebrew kuh-too-veem; Ashkenazic Hebrew, English kuh-too-vim] /Sephardic Hebrew kə tuˈvim; Ashkenazic Hebrew, English kəˈtu vɪm/ noun, Hebrew. 1. the Hagiographa.
- Keuka-lake
[kyoo-kuh, key-oo] /ˈkyu kə, keɪˈu/ noun 1. a lake in W central New York, one of the Finger Lakes. 18 miles (29 km) long.
- KeV
1. . abbreviation 1. kilo-electronvolt kiloelectron unit