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Definition of Line triple
1. Noun. A triple resulting from a line drive.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Line Triple
Literary usage of Line triple
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ovid: Selected Works, with Notes and Vocabulary by Ovid (1900)
"... 207-210 (a strongly onomatopoetic passage with many repetitions); XIII, 284;
XV, 757, 758 (in one line, triple ending in -os and double in -isse, ..."
2. The Potters' Quarter by Agnes Newhall Stillwell, Jack Leonard Benson (1984)
"Pendent rays on shoulder and double checker pattern below, bordered by line triple
lines. Frieze of running dogs and one rabbit, r., in silhouette. ..."
3. Modern Engineering Practice: A Reference Library by American School (Chicago, Ill.) (1906)
"... of the low more nearly parallel to the atmospheric line. Triple expansion
engines have two receivers called the first receiver and the second receiver. ..."
4. Modern Engineering Practice: Steam, Electricity, Mechanics by Frank Wakeley Gunsaulus, Ill American School (Chicago, American School (Chicago, Ill.) (1903)
"... of the low more nearly parallel to the atmospheric line. Triple expansion
engines have two receivers called the first receiver and the second receiver. ..."
5. Transactions of the North-East Coast Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders (1887)
"... on the present three cylinders in line, triple compound engines, retaining
all the advantages of the uniform balanced crank, set at 120 degrees. ..."
6. Cyclopedia of Engineering: A General Reference Work on Steam Boilers, Pumps by American School (Chicago, Ill.), Louis Derr, American Technical Society, Chicago (1909)
"... of the low more nearly parallel to the atmospheric, line. Triple expansion
engines have two receivers called the first receiver and the second receiver. ..."
7. The Locomotive Up to Date by Charles McShane (1899)
"A. , Because there is a leak in the train line, triple valves or auxiliary
reservoirs; or the auxiliaries have not all equalized after releasing the brake. ..."
8. Spectrum Analysis: Six Lectures, Delivered in 1868, Before the Society of by Henry Enfield Roscoe (1873)
"Lockyer on this occasion saw the F line triple, and the greatest lateral displacement
of the line corresponded to the enormous velocity of 120 miles per ..."