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Definition of Combination plane
1. Noun. A woodworking plane that has interchangeable cutters of various shapes.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Combination Plane
Literary usage of Combination plane
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Treatise on Crystallography by William James Lewis (1899)
"of two like portions of separate crystals, and the faces {110} and {110} meeting
in the combination-plane belong to different forms. ..."
2. Crystallography: A Treatise on the Morphology of Crystals by Nevil Story-Maskelyne (1895)
"Haidinger, in 1822', described the law of these twins as being twin-plane, a face
of the octahedron {101}, combination-plane perpendicular to the twin-plane ..."
3. Bulletin by Seventh-Day Adventists General Conference. Dept. of Education (1912)
"New Tools (to be studied and used) : Back saw, combination plane, oilstone, chisel
and mallet, miter box and clamp, grindstone. ..."
4. Bulletin by United States (1918)
"In making window frames it is often desirable to use a combination plane usually
known as a " Stanley 55. ..."
5. Radford's Cyclopedia of Construction; Carpentry, Building and Architecture edited by William A. Radford, Alfred Sidney Johnson (1909)
"Also a combination plane, for making rabbets, grooves, etc. The cost of this
outfit of tools will not be so great as one might think, when purchased as a ..."