Good gawd... so many of these are flat out wrong, or not adequately explained!
Aglet is the coated tip of a lace, not the whole lace.
Snood is a net like hairpiece that holds the hair on the back of the head, the part on a turkey they mention is called the wattle.
Only ball peen hammers (sometimes called a machinist's hammer) have a peen. The "regular" hammers most people are familiar with is a claw hammer, and the side opposite the face (hammer striking face) is the claw.
Only bottles for sparking wines, like champagne, have a punt.
Good gawd... so many of these are flat out wrong, or not adequately explained!
Aglet is the coated tip of a lace, not the whole lace.
Snood is a net like hairpiece that holds the hair on the back of the head, the part on a turkey they mention is called the wattle.
Only ball peen hammers (sometimes called a machinist's hammer) have a peen. The "regular" hammers most people are familiar with is a claw hammer, and the side opposite the face (hammer striking face) is the claw.
Only bottles for sparking wines, like champagne, have a punt.
Aglet is the coated tip of a lace, not the whole lace.
Snood is a net like hairpiece that holds the hair on the back of the head, the part on a turkey they mention is called the wattle.
Only ball peen hammers (sometimes called a machinist's hammer) have a peen. The "regular" hammers most people are familiar with is a claw hammer, and the side opposite the face (hammer striking face) is the claw.
Only bottles for sparking wines, like champagne, have a punt.