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gag 1. Metal block, used with in a vise, which is sized and shaped to give the needed contours to the piece of metal that is bending or shaping. 2. Clamp that is used to prevent the safety valve on a boiler from opening. This is used when the boiler is hydrostatically pressure tested.
Ãâó: www.peakagents.ca/glossary/g1.htm
gag reflex a normal reflex triggered by touching the soft palate or back of the throat that raises the palate, retracts the tongue and contracts the throat muscles; protects the airways from a bolus of food or liquid
Ãâó: depts.washington.edu/pwdlearn/web/glossary/glossar...
gage In hydrologic terms, 1) A device for indicating the magnitude or position of a thing in specific units, when such magnitude or position undergoes change, for example: The elevation of a water surface, the velocity of flowing water, the pressure of water, the amount or intensity of precipitation, the depth of snowfall, etc. (2) The act or operation of registering or measuring the magnitude or position of a thing when these characteristics are undergoing change. ...
Ãâó: weather.gov/glossary/glossary.php
gage Gauge is the spelling used in Great Britain but finds some use in the US It is chiefly found for nonlinear measurement instruments (fluid gages, etc.). However, it is finding increased use for coordinate measuring machines where it designates a device with a proportional range and some form of indicator.
Ãâó: www.ticms.com/wizard/glossary.htm
gage Device for registering water level, discharge, velocity, pressure, etc. A number that defines the thickness of the sheet used to make steel pipe. The larger the number, the thinner the pipe wall.
Ãâó: www.alpha-plumbing.com/plumbing-terminology-g.htm
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