different between marling vs marline

marling

English

Verb

marling

  1. present participle of marl

Noun

marling (plural marlings)

  1. An application of marl to the soil, to aid agriculture.

marling From the web:

  • marling meaning
  • marling what he wrote
  • marling what he wrote lyrics
  • what does marbling mean
  • what is marling in knitting
  • what is marbling in agriculture
  • what is marbling in history
  • what is marling industrial revolution


marline

English

Etymology

From Middle English merlin, from Middle Low German marling, from Middle Dutch marlijn (cord), from marlen (secure, fasten), frequentative of maren (to moor), from Proto-Germanic *mair?n? (to moor, fasten to), from Proto-Indo-European *mer-.

Noun

marline (plural marlines)

  1. A light cord or rope used to bind the end of a larger rope, to prevent fraying.
    • 1749 (Sunday 26th May), John Newton's journal
      A young man, who has been the whole voyage out of irons, first on account of a large ulcer, and since for his seeming good behaviour, gave them a large marline spike down the gratings, but was happily seen by one of the people.
  2. Twine used similarly.

Derived terms

  • marlinspike

Translations

Verb

marline (third-person singular simple present marlines, present participle marlining, simple past and past participle marlined)

  1. (nautical) To wind marline around.
    Synonym: marl
    to marline a rope

Anagrams

  • Lierman, Mineral, manlier, mineral, railmen, ramline

marline From the web:

  • what marlins pitcher died
  • what marlin gets the biggest
  • what marlin 336
  • marlineanimates what does the fox say
  • what is marlinespike seamanship
  • what is marline spike
  • what does marline mean
  • marlins test
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like