Teeth vs Bandsaw - What's the difference?
teeth | bandsaw |
(plural only) The ability to be enforced, or to be enforced to any useful effect.
A powered saw whose blade is a continuous band of metal with teeth along one edge.
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=January 7, author=Tim Moran, title=Sliced, Diced and Polished to Perfection, Cutaway Displays Reveal All, work=New York Times
, passage=Their work is more cerebral than the careful placement of an engine block — or an entire car — on a bandsaw . }}
To cut with a bandsaw.
As nouns the difference between teeth and bandsaw
is that teeth is while bandsaw is a powered saw whose blade is a continuous band of metal with teeth along one edge.As a verb bandsaw is
to cut with a bandsaw.teeth
English
Noun
(head)Synonyms
* (plural of "tooth") chompers, pearly whites * (ability to be enforced) enforceabilityDerived terms
* arm to the teeth * by the skin of one's teeth * cut one's teeth * get one's teeth into / sink one's teeth into * give one's eye-teeth * gnash one's teeth * grit one's teeth * in the teeth of * lie through one's teeth * set one's teeth on edgeSee also
* toothless English irregular pluralsbandsaw
English
Alternative forms
* band saw * band-sawNoun
(en noun) (wikipedia bandsaw)citation