0 a small, round metal container used for measuring strong alcoholic drinks, or the amount of alcohol that this container holds --
1 a chigger --
2 to change something, especially unfairly or illegally: --
If the ice is transparent enough, one just makes another hole over the jigger when it moves far away.
A ship's vertical masts are named, from bow to stern, the fore-mast, the main-mast, the mizzen-mast and the jigger-mast.
The engine was "valveless" and had no jiggers to adjust and no seats to grind.
Their plans include assembling a building to store a mining jigger that was removed for restoration more than a decade ago.
Many references from the 1800s describe giving a jigger of whiskey or rum to workers who were digging canals.
To strengthen the fastening, a functional inner-button, called the "jigger" (or "anchor button"), is usually added to parallel-fasten the over-lapped layers together from the inside.
In that period she was the first ship in history that flew royals above her topgallant sails and a topgallant sail on the jigger-mast.
In this way a person by an ice hole propels the jigger away.