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bobbin
[bob-in]
noun
a reel, cylinder, or spool upon which yarn or thread is wound, as used in spinning, machine sewing, lacemaking, etc.
Electricity.
a spoollike form around which a coil of insulated wire is wound to provide an inductance.
the coil itself.
bobbin
/ ˈɒɪ /
noun
a spool or reel on which thread or yarn is wound, being unwound as required; spool; reel
narrow braid or cord used as binding or for trimming
a device consisting of a short bar and a length of string, used to control a wooden door latch
a spool on which insulated wire is wound to form the coil of a small electromagnetic device, such as a bell or buzzer
the coil of such a spool
slang(plural) matter that is worthless or of inferior quality; rubbish
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of bobbin1
Example Sentences
The southeast space had lots of cloth fragments, along with bobbins and loom weights.
The large courtyard was sunlit and humming with busyness, as twelve women sat at large frames making bobbin lace.
Threads and wool of all colors, bobbins, tools and spinning wheels are everywhere.
At 13, he worked in an Allegheny cotton mill, changing bobbins 6 days a week, 12 hours a day.
A few days later, antislavery members lined up behind the American Party’s “Bobbin Boy” Banks, who as a boy worked in a textile factory carrying bobbins of thread to the women who operated the looms.
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