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sennit การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The runners, crosspieces, and rails are bound together with sennit cordage.
  • The armor was made of thickly woven sennit, a kind of coconut fiber.
  • Sennit is mentioned in Robert Gibbings book " Over the Reefs " ( 1948 ).
  • "' Sennit "'is a type of plaiting strands of dried fibre or grass.
  • Combs collected were made from the midribs of coconut leaflets, intertwined with fine sennit cord to make decorative patterns.
  • Earlier generations used sennit grass, or tediously pulled the fiber from the shells of coconuts and wove them into rope.
  • He also does a little men's work, fishing, nut gathering and husking, and sennit-making.
  • Sennit is an important material in the cultures of Oceania, where it is used in traditional architecture, boat building, fishing and as an ornamentation.
  • Two parallel lengths of marline are stretched between fixed points, and the lengths of yarn are attached using a hitch called a " railroad sennit ".
  • It is normally made of stiff sennit straw and has a stiff flat crown and brim, typically with a solid or striped grosgrain ribbon around the crown.
  • Linguistically, kia kaha consists of the desiderative sennit rope, a strong rope made from coconut fibres and used for lashing canoes, weapons, and buildings together.
  • Sennit had a variety of other uses, including in shark fishing, where it was used as a noose that was placed over the shark's head as it came alongside the canoe.
  • It is also used for making coconut oil, baskets, sennit rope used in traditional Samoan house building, weaving and for the building of small traditional houses or " fale ".
  • He turns her eyes into lights for her sister to make sennit ( " magi-magi " ) and her feet into supports for the sister's work basket ( Beckwith 1970 : 261 ).
  • And when the supplies are in place, without using nails or screws, builders carefully erect the hut, held together by synthetic lashings, durable material typically used in place of the traditional braided coconut husk known as sennit.
  • A sacred god figure wrapping for the war god'Oro, made of woven dried coconut fibre ( sennit ), which would have protected a Polynesian god effigy ( " to'o " ), made of wood.
  • Puna comes in shark form to avenge himself, kills Vahi-vero and takes his wife back and makes of her eyes lights for her sister to do sennit work by and of her feet supports for the sister's work basket ( Beckwith 1970 : 261 ).
  • Although fragile, the construction is clear : it is made of bast fibre ( almost certainly flax ) twine; the cords are braided in a 10-strand elliptical sennit and the cradle seems to have been woven from the same lengths of twine used to form the cords.
  • Concerning the bures that were on the island Wilkes says,  The walls and roof of the mbure [ bure ] are constructed of canes about the size of a finger, and each one is wound round with sennit [ Magimagi ] as thick as cod-line, made from the cocoa-nut husk ( p . 119 ).
  • A significant quote from the book, made by a village chief to Gibbings, emphasises the importance of sennit in Samoan culture : " In your country, " said a chief to me, " only a few men can make nails, but in Samoa, everyone can make nails . " ( p . 118 ) He was referring to the sennit that is used to bind the structures or huts in which they lived.
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