multitwist

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English

Etymology

From multi- +‎ twist.

Noun

multitwist (plural multitwists)

  1. Multiple twists that occur together.
    • 1998, Textile Technology Digest - Volume 55, Issues 7-12, page 34:
      Yarns highlighted include wools, stretch yarns, metallics, textures, multicolored, and multitwists.
    • 2010, Jeremy Telford, Balloonology, →ISBN, page 122:
      Twist both the 1" bubbles in the multitwist into bear ears.
    • 2016, Vicky Glasgow, The Mage Emperor, →ISBN:
      The multitwists of her black hair curtained like rivers down her frontal.
  2. (topology) An automorphism that induces a set of Dehn twists around a surface.
    • 2007, Athanase Papadopoulos, Handbook of Teichmüller Theory - Volume 1, →ISBN, page 407:
      A Leininger-Reid subgroup cannot be convex cocompact, because it contains a multitwist.

Adjective

multitwist (not comparable)

  1. Characterized by multiple twists.
    • 1951, National Park Service Archeological Research Series, page 116:
      For multitwist cords, the symbol for direction of twist of the single yarns is given first, with each subsequent direction following in order.
    • 1976, Nuri Y. Olcer, Sam Lévin, Recoilless rifle weapon systems, page 10-28:
      In most recoilless rifle weapon systems, uniform rifling twist is used since it meets the desired requirements and is less expensive to manufacture than a rifle tube with multitwist rifling.
    • 1983, Craig Jones, Fatal attraction, →ISBN, page 286:
      There's not a dull moment in this . . . shocking tale of evil family ties by a psychologically perceptive writer who knows how to build up to a searing, multitwist ending the way a tornado gathers momentum.