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There was also hairdressing: hairdressing, too, really was hairdressing in those times — no running a comb through it and that was that. It was curled, frizzed, waved, put in curlers overnight, waved with hot tongs;[…].
A machine used in separating choice cotton fibers from worsted cloth fibers.
The toothed plate at the top and bottom of an escalator that prevents objects getting trapped between the moving stairs and fixed landings.
A toothed tool used for chasing screws on work in a lathe; a chaser.
The collector of an electrical machine, usually resembling a comb.
A toothed plate used for creating wells in agar gels for electrophoresis.
(weaving) A toothed wooden pick used to push the weft thread tightly against the previous pass of thread to create a tight weave.
One of a pair of peculiar organs on the base of the abdomen in scorpions, with which they comb substrate.
A crest:
A fleshy growth on the top of the head of some birds and reptiles; crest.
(by extension) A crest (of metal, leather, etc) on a piece of armor, especially on a helmet.
1888, “Journal of the United Service Institution of India”, in United Service Institution of India, page 197:
The head-dress of the Horse Grenadiers consists of a peculiar leather helmet with a comb of bear's skin passing over it from ear to ear and a long scarlet […]
1898, John Starkie Gardner, Armour in England from the Earliest Times to the Seventeenth Century, page 44:
The armet has usually a low central cabled comb with parallel flutes on either side, occasionally there are three or five combs.
1909, Albert Frederick Calvert, Madrid: An Historical Description and Handbook of the Spanish Capital, page 82:
The combs or elbow pieces are beautifully made, and over the right armpit is […]
2021, Charles Henry Ashdown, British and Foreign Arms & Armour, Good Press:
Charles I. (Edinburgh Castle) The Pikeman of the time of James I. was accoutred in a morion-shaped helmet with a comb of moderate size and a flat brim, […]
The top part of a gun’s stock.
A structure of hexagon cells made by bees for storing honey; honeycomb.
The combs of the wild bees are found on overhanging precipices, and the only means by which they can be reached is to descend from above on narrow cane ladders just wide enough for a man’s foot, and often 300 feet to 400 feet long.
(music) The main body of a harmonica containing the air chambers and to which the reed plates are attached.
A former, commonly cone-shaped, used in hat manufacturing for hardening soft fibre.
An old English measure of corn equal to the half quarter.
1882, James Edwin Thorold Rogers, A History of Agriculture and Prices in England, volume 4, page 207:
But the comb or half quarter is very general in the Eastern counties, particularly in Norfolk.
The aircraft split up so as to attack from different, preselected bearings, thus confusing the gunners and making it difficult for the ship to comb torpedo tracks.
2013, Steve Backer, British Battlecruisers of the Second World War, page 10:
Sixteen torpedo bombers divided their attention between the two ships. Repulsecombed the torpedo wakes and knocked down two of the attackers.
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1971, George Ewart Evans, quoting auctioneer Aston Gaze, Tools of Their Trades: An Oral History of Men at Work c. 1900, Taplinger Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 109:
[Regarding a period of agricultural depression] Even on the good land where the farmer hadn't enough capital to look after it and have it properly drained he couldn't hold on. He'd be getting a yield of eight combs of wheat and ten combs of barley per acre. But that wasn't good enough: it gave him no leeway. This is understandable when you recollect the price of wheat at that time.
comb in Bárczi, Géza and László Országh. A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára (“The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language”, abbr.: ÉrtSz.). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992: →ISBN
comb in Nóra Ittzés, editor, A magyar nyelv nagyszótára [A Comprehensive Dictionary of the Hungarian Language] (Nszt.), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 2006–2031 (work in progress; published a–ez as of 2024).