0 to (cause to) go round and round rapidly -- memusing
1 to form threads from (wool, cotton etc) by drawing out and twisting -- memintal
2 a whirling or turning motion -- berpusing-pusing
3 a ride, especially on wheels -- bersiar-siar
However, immortality does not come easy on this spinning earth.
They also like to up-end push and pull toys for imaginary mending, and wheels can be spun at different speeds.
In spinning the position by 1913 had become truly remarkable.
Finding enough spinners at the peak periods of clothmaking must have been no easy task, given the prevailing wage levels for spinning yarn.
Is it in the least surprising, therefore, that spinning was seen as work for women (or children)?
In the sixteenth century commentators were clear that a livelihood could not be gained from spinning alone.
The type of fiber used and the end-product desired determine the technique of spinning and the tools utilized.
She also found that women spun, and presumably wove, maguey and cotton in both commoner and elite households.
中文繁体
旋轉, (使)(尤指快速)旋轉, 紡線…
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旋转, (使)(尤指快速)旋转, 纺线…
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dar vueltas (a), hilar, girar…
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girar, rodar, fiar…
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くるくる回る(回す), 回転する(させる), (糸を)紡ぐ…
MoreTürk dili
dönmek, döndürmek, (yün…
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faire tourner, tisser, filer…
MoreCatalan
giravoltar, (fer) girar, filar…
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