SHAFTS vs DIG: NOUN
- Plural form of shaft.
- A column of light (as from a beacon)
- Obscene terms for penis
- A long pointed rod used as a weapon
- The hollow shaft of a feather
- An aggressive remark directed at a person like a missile and intended to have a telling effect
- The main (mid) section of a long bone
- A revolving rod that transmits power or motion
- A line that forms the length of an arrow pointer
- A vertical passageway through a building (as for an elevator)
- (architecture) upright consisting of the vertical part of a column
- A vertical passage into a mine
- A long rod or pole (especially the handle of an implement or the body of a weapon like a spear or arrow)
- An aggressive remark directed at a person like a missile and intended to have a telling effect
- The site of an archeological exploration
- A small gouge (as in the cover of a book)
- The act of touching someone suddenly with your finger or elbow
- The act of digging
- A sarcastic, taunting remark; a gibe.
- An archaeological excavation.
- An act or an instance of digging a ball.
- Lodgings.
- A thrust; a punch; a poke: as, a dig in the ribs: often used figuratively of sarcasm and criticism.
- A diligent or plodding student.
- A poke or thrust.
SHAFTS vs DIG: VERB
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of shaft.
- Work hard
- Poke or thrust abruptly
- Turn up, loosen, or remove earth
- Create by digging
- Remove the inner part or the core of
- Get the meaning of something
SHAFTS vs DIG: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To make one's way by or as if by pushing aside or removing material.
- To loosen, turn over, or remove earth or other material.
- To take notice of.
- To have understanding.
- To break up, turn over, or remove (earth or sand, for example), as with a shovel, spade, or snout, or with claws, paws or hands.
- To prepare (soil) by loosening or cultivating.
- To obtain or unearth by digging.
- To obtain or find by an action similar to digging.
- To learn or discover by careful research or investigation.
- To like, enjoy, or appreciate.
- To understand fully.
- To poke or prod.
- To force down and into something; thrust.
- To make or form by removing earth or other material.
- To strike or redirect (a ball) just before it hits the ground, keeping it in play, as in tennis or volleyball.
SHAFTS vs DIG: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To turn up, or delve in, (earth) with a spade or a hoe; to open, loosen, or break up (the soil) with a spade, or other sharp instrument; to pierce, open, or loosen, as if with a spade.
- To get by digging.
- To hollow out, as a well; to form, as a ditch, by removing earth; to excavate.
- To like; enjoy; admire.
- To undermine and cause to fall by digging; as, to dig down a wall.
- To get out or obtain by digging. The preposition is often omitted; as, the men are digging coal, digging iron ore, digging potatoes.
- To entrench oneself so as to give stronger resistance; -- used of warfare or negotiating situations.
- To thrust; to poke.
SHAFTS vs DIG: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- To make a ditch or other excavation; turn up or throw out earth or other material, as in making a ditch or channel or in tilling: as, to dig in the field; to dig to the bottom of something.
- To study hard; give much time to study; grind.
- To excavate; make a passage through or into, or remove, by loosening and taking away material: usually followed by an adverb: as, to dig up the ground; to dig out a choked tunnel.
- To form by excavation; make by digging: as, to dig a tunnel, a well, a mine, etc.; to dig one's way out.
- To break up and turn over piecemeal, as a portion of ground: as, to dig a garden with a spade; a hog digs the ground with his snout.
- To excavate a passage or tunnel for; make a way of escape for by digging: as, he dug himself out of prison.
- To obtain or remove by excavation; figuratively, to find or discover by effort or search; get by close attention or investigation: often followed by up or out: as, to dig potatoes; to dig or dig out ore; to dig up old records; to dig out a lesson.
- To cause to penetrate; thrust or force in: followed by into: as, he dug his spurs into his horse's flanks; he dug his heel into the ground.
- Remove, harvest, or recover by digging
- Thrust down or into
- (idiom) (dig in (one's) heels) To resist opposition stubbornly; refuse to yield or compromise.
- (idiom) (dig it out) To run as fast as one can, especially as a base runner in baseball.
SHAFTS vs DIG: RELATED WORDS
- Prick, Slam, Cock, Quill, Barb, Spear, Shot, Dick, Pecker, Chicane, Dig, Lance, Beam, Screw, Diaphysis
- Savvy, Dig out, Drudge, Apprehend, Hollow, Slam, Shaft, Toil, Prod, Stab, Grind, Excavation, Poke, Delve, Excavate
SHAFTS vs DIG: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Tool, Slam, Cock, Quill, Barb, Spear, Shot, Dick, Pecker, Chicane, Dig, Lance, Beam, Screw, Diaphysis
- Barb, Comprehend, Savvy, Apprehend, Hollow, Slam, Shaft, Toil, Prod, Stab, Grind, Excavation, Poke, Delve, Excavate
SHAFTS vs DIG: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The ktm shafts were lighter and stiffer than the zz lite shafts.
- The tight tolerances of these shafts ensure the most consistent performing shafts in golf.
- To make the Shafts, cut an Achey Tree from near Rantz and fletch them into arrow shafts.
- Drive axle: axle housings and internal parts, axle shafts, drive shafts, output shafts, and universal joints.
- In the Propeller Shafts: Drive shafts, universal joints.
- So there are graphite shafts and stainless steel shafts.
- These tools help you tighten tips and metal shafts, spread metal shafts for easy insertion of flights, and reshapes metal shafts.
- These settings work fine for the shafts weaker thanbut for stiffer shafts, less centershot is needed than for ordinary parallel shafts.
- Typical components include tailshafts, intermediate shafts, thrust shafts, other torsional shafts, sleeves, couplings, propeller nuts, rudder stocks, canard stocks, used in shipboard units.
- This sort of failure is usually seen in drive shafts, input shafts and output shafts.
- Dig that shouting all caps at the beginning.
- Page for political purposes to dig up dirt.
- Exemplary teachers dig deeper into this formative data.
- Man, how do you dig up this stuff?
- Then we decided to dig a little deeper.
- Dino dig oasis hers a picture of Dino dig oasis.
- Jeg elsker dig, min son, og Guf elsker dig ogsa.
- You want to complete your Masters thesis by completing an archaeological dig, but know that any dig is incredibly expensive.
- Themed topics include: Apartment Block with Branches Dig, Diggers, Dig!
- So dig in, dig in, dig we must, right?
SHAFTS vs DIG: QUESTIONS
- Which epoch dragonfly lacrosse shafts should I buy?
- Why choose Spicer driveshaft and inter-axle shafts?
- Are all 900cc sprocket shafts and pinions interchangeable?
- Are TaylorMade Golf graphite shafts available for sale?
- Do the M2 drivers come with interchangeable shafts?
- Are there plug&play Cobra driver replacement shafts?
- Do propulsion shafts vibrate under dynamic excitations?
- What are osteoconductive/cortical/cancellous shafts?
- What shafts are compatible with the tour AD utility/driving iron shafts?
- Should fairway shafts be heavier than driver shafts?
- What level does Graveler learn dig in Pokemon Ruby?
- Why did WW1 soldiers dig trenches to protect themselves?
- What size trenching/dig bucket to remove tree stumps?
- Was BBC's Alice Roberts at Pembrokeshire archaeological dig?
- Why did soldiers on the Western Front dig trenches?
- How are Digoxigenin (DIG)-labeled antisense RNA probes synthesized?
- Did archaeologists dig up an ancient alien cellphone?
- What toolbar elements does your dig frontend support?
- Did Oyston family make dig at Blackpool in latest Oyston dig?
- Did Schmeichel take a cheeky dig at England with England dig?