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Definition of Blade bit
1. Noun. A drilling bit with cutting edges usually hardened against wear.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Blade Bit
Literary usage of Blade bit
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Drill Work, Methods and Costs; a Practical Treatise Covering the Methods by Ray Rochester Sanderson (1911)
"Thin blade bit. To further increase the effectiveness of the water, the side
holes are so drilled that the water is discharged down along both sides of the ..."
2. Everyday Classics.: Primer-eighth Reader. by Franklin Thomas Baker, Ashley Horace Thorndike, Fannie Wyche Dunn, Mildred Batchelder (1918)
"The gray stone chipped and splintered, but the good blade 20 broke not, neither
was its edge turned. He smote the second step; the blade bit it, ..."
3. King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table: A Modernized Version of the by Thomas Malory, Charles Morris (1891)
"Eagerly to battle went the two knights, hewing at each other like giants with
their swords. But Arthur's blade bit not like ..."
4. Language Reader by Franklin Thomas Baker, George Rice Carpenter, Jennie Freeborn Owens (1906)
"He smote the second step; the blade bit it, and leaped back, but blunted not,
nor broke. The third step he smote with all his might; it powdered where he ..."
5. Drill Work, Methods and Costs; a Practical Treatise Covering the Methods by Ray Rochester Sanderson (1911)
"Thin blade bit. To further increase the effectiveness of the water, the side
holes are so drilled that the water is discharged down along both sides of the ..."
6. Everyday Classics.: Primer-eighth Reader. by Franklin Thomas Baker, Ashley Horace Thorndike, Fannie Wyche Dunn, Mildred Batchelder (1918)
"The gray stone chipped and splintered, but the good blade 20 broke not, neither
was its edge turned. He smote the second step; the blade bit it, ..."
7. King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table: A Modernized Version of the by Thomas Malory, Charles Morris (1891)
"Eagerly to battle went the two knights, hewing at each other like giants with
their swords. But Arthur's blade bit not like ..."
8. Language Reader by Franklin Thomas Baker, George Rice Carpenter, Jennie Freeborn Owens (1906)
"He smote the second step; the blade bit it, and leaped back, but blunted not,
nor broke. The third step he smote with all his might; it powdered where he ..."