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#24347 03/23/01 02:27 PM
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In maritime parlance "dead men" are loose ends of gaskets hanging from a yard; or "Irish pennants" which means a loose end hanging about the sails or rigging.
What's your definition?
wow



#24348 03/23/01 02:31 PM
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Gee, Flatlander, I know that a deadman's switch is one designed to require active operation, so that leaving one unattended stops operation of the machinery. I associate deadman's switches with trains. I'm guessing that, in the construction industry, a deadman is something similarly related to safety?


#24349 03/23/01 02:46 PM
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Plank projecting over end of scaffolding?


#24350 03/23/01 03:56 PM
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ps. Anyone know what a "deadman" is in construction parlance? Answer will follow.

It exists in medical physics, too. When I'd first heard it, I'd guessed it was borrowed from heavy equipment operations of some sort. It's the switch you have to hold down to keep the gantry moving when setting up a linear accelerator for a radiation therapy treatment. Presumably if the gantry squashes you unexpectedly against the wall, you let go of the deadman , and it stops squashing further.


#24351 03/23/01 04:01 PM
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>Boy, somebody really cobbed these cabinets in here.

we'd say "cobbled" in that instance.



#24352 03/23/01 04:16 PM
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we'd say "cobbled" in that instance.

undoing the 'haplog'


#24353 03/23/01 05:45 PM
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Anyone know what a "deadman" is in construction parlance? Answer will follow.

A "deadman" is a temporary post or column used to hold up a ceiling or roof while the walls are built/repaired, presumably because a dead man could do the job. I like it because it's such a morbid word for such a simple thing.

Flatlander


#24354 03/23/01 08:14 PM
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presumably because a dead man could do the job

Presumably because he's a stiff?
wow


#24355 03/24/01 04:22 AM
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The Five Graves to Cairo were the five letters of "Cairo," so much (once again) for poor sources. Still, I have it from some damn place that Jerry is Ger'y.


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In WWII, "Jerry" was US Army slang for the krauts.

Copied from the British if used by the Americans. "Kraut" (derived from "sauerkraut"?) was the usual American slang. "Jerry" was originally a semi-affectionate(!) contraction of "German" coined in Britain.



The idiot also known as Capfka ...
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