Lexicographical Neighbors of Lattens
Literary usage of Lattens
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Collections of the New York Historical Society for the Year by New-York Historical Society (1899)
"Conkling and by a ditch called Long Ditch, south by the Bay, west by a creek
between West Neck and lattens Neck creek, north by said ditch north of Walnut ..."
2. Iron and Steel (a Pocket Encyclopedia): Including Allied Industries and Sciences by Hugh Philip Tiemann (1919)
"In England sheets or plates of 20 gage or thicker are called singles; 21 to 24
gage, doubles; 25 to 27 gage, trebles or lattens; and those down to 29 gage, ..."
3. Galvanized Iron: Its Manufacture and Uses. A Detailed Description of this by James Davies (1899)
"Staffordshire iron sheets are quoted to-day at £6 los. for Doubles, and ^7 for
lattens, per ton, at manufacturer's works, and this of course includes the ..."
4. Cassell's Engineer's Handbook: Comprising Facts and Formulæ, Principles and by Henry Adams (1907)
"28, extra lattens. Singles are less than /^ inch in thickness, and when the sheets
are less than about S.0 inch they are too thin to be rolled separately, ..."
5. Notes and Queries by Martim de Albuquerque (1849)
"If so the bells of the horse-harness were probably spelt " lattens " and not "
Latins " ? WOLSELEY. Massetts Place, Scaynes Hill, Sussex. ST. ..."
6. The Popular Science Monthly by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1874)
"First he lattens the top of his ball; then, as he continues to press upon the [mint,
the adjacent clay rises around it; and next you have a cup. ..."