18 example sentences using abrade.
Abrade used in a sentence
Abrade in a sentence as a verb
These palms can be abraded on the ropes and sails and ropes the front.
Chalk is not, although I'm not sure it's hard enough to abrade away your tartar deposits.
Will the balls abrade from rubbing together constantly?
If there was, this kind of nonsense would be abraded away by market forces with incredible speed.
Even though polymers abrade over long periods of time, it sounds like your product should be licensed.
"Coal dust will abrade and destroy almost everything and it's because of the graphite, not the diamond.
You might abrade traces of lead onto your hands handling soldering wire, but surely washing your hands after soldering gets rid of that.
If smooth, lightly abrade any polished surfaces if practical, and ca should work fine when gaps are <1mm, use baking soda to fill gaps qnd build up edges.
Overall it is slightly better than filling the hole with gravel, since gravel will tend to abrade the edges of the road surface and make the hole larger.
It's appropriate where you need extreme density, or inside portable equipment where wires not secured to each other may abrade each other.
Or abrade the mold off. Don't be afraid to cut beyond the rind into the proper cheese: almost all of the surface of a piece of cheese is interior in any case and the rind is important for whole wheels aging on a shelf, not to preserve a wedge in the fridge for a few weeks.
I doubt this hydrophobic coating can withstand being walked upon and thoroughly abraded by a 200lb worker after being applied to the soles of the boots - the part that actually tracks mud.
I don't imagine the rock salt producers are allowing a whole bunch of plastic manufacturing equipment to abrade directly into the product.
Does the skin get abraded into the microstructure of the material surface and degrade its hydrophobic properties?Looks amazing though watching the water spread out and spring back that much.
As insecticides, some act as stomach poisons in ants, cockroaches, silverfishand termites, while others abrade the exoskeletons of insects.
The really scary thing is that as he points out, it actually seems to be designed with an apparently reasonable amount of isolation between the primary and secondary - it's just that something managed to completely abrade the insulation.
There's at least one open source printer that's trying this at the moment[1], and HP proposed a similar machine for the commercial sector[2].The biggest issue, in my experience, ends up being that most non-metal printed parts are relatively brittle and prone to the material rubbing off if the outer layers are even lightly abraded.
Some points they don't address: * Maintaining the high-friction surface of the glass as it is worn down\n * Keeping the road surface transparent to sunlight as it is abraded away and covered with dirt, motor oil and ground rubber\n * Huge energy requirements for melting snow, especially in areas where snow, ice and winter storms would reduce the energy generated by the panels\n * The _actual_ cost of their road surface compared to asphalt