The proper term for a post on a ship is a "Stanchion".
Stanchion is a type of post that provides support for structures or objects and keep them upright. They can be seen holding up car head rests, holding up goal posts in soccer or on bicycles.
The velvet rope is hooked onto something called a stanchion.
A stanchion is used to hold a cow still while giving her shots, oral medicines, simple medical procedures, or milking. There are different types for different purposes. A simple head gate is usually used for milking while a full body squeeze chute is used for medical treatments and procedures.
Stanchions are commonly used to hold things up or support them. One can find them as part of the goal posts on a soccer field for example and commentators sometimes refer to a player 'hitting the stanchion' with a shot.
One could obtain crowd control barriers from a few places, such Stanchion Depot's website and Sonco Barricades website. FS Industries also offers crowd control barricades.
The specific name for a cage where cows are held is a "stanchion" or "cow stall." Stanchions are commonly used in dairy farming to restrain cows in place for milking or feeding.
1. fold down chest pad 2. extend arm exerciser beam 3. remove stanchion (upright post thingie) lock pin 4. fold down stanchion into the stowed position 5. push in the spring loaded release plinger and fold arm exerciser down into the stowed position. 6. That's it!
You may be looking for rafter, column, joist, truss, strut, piling, stringer, stud, boom, brace, girder, jamb, lintel, pile, pillar, spar, stanchion.
"Buttress" as a verb can mean strengthen, reinforce, fortify, support, bolster, underpin, cement, uphold, defend, sustain "Buttress" as a noun can mean prop, support, abutment, brace, shore, pier, reinforcement, stanchion, safeguard, defense, protection, guard, support, bulwark If you answer "support," you've got it covered either way.
A stanchion is an upright bar or post, used to support or guide something. Queuing stanchions are a type of devices for guiding and directing the flow of a queue (people waiting in line). The most common type of queuing stanchions are movable posts with some type rope (source of the term 'behind the velvet rope'), band, or chain connecting them.
No, there are no telephone poles at the US base in Antarctica. Communication at the base is typically through satellite phones, internet, and radio due to the harsh environment that prevents the use of traditional telephone poles.