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jigger A piece of rope about five feet long, with a block at one end and a sheave at the other. Used to pull back (tension) the hind part of a cable, when it is heaved into the ship by the revolution of the windlass.
Ãâó: www.ageofsail.net/aostermi.asp
jig Fixture that holds the truss in position until rigidly fastened with connectors.
Ãâó: www.woodtruss.com/terminology.php
jig (possibly from Old French giguer, "to dance, to kick, to gambol"): In Renaissance drama, a jig was a song-and-dance performance by a clown and/or other actors at the conclusion of a play. The dances were often extremely bawdy, which lead to the banning of "public jigs" in 1612 under Puritan influences.
Ãâó: web.cn.edu/kwheeler/lit_terms_J.html
jig An apparatus for cleaning or separating crushed ore by agitation in water.
Ãâó: www.nalms.org/glossary/lkword_j.htm
jig a hook with a leadhead that is usually dressed with hair, silicone, or plastic.
Ãâó: www.riversmallies.com/glossary.html
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