puncheons Meaning in Bengali
Noun:
মধ্যাহ্নভোজ,
Similer Words:
puncherspuncta
punctation
punctations
punctilio
punctilios
punctiliousness
puncto
punctualist
punctualists
punctualities
punctuative
punctuator
punctulate
punctulation
puncheons's Usage Examples:
butter churns, hogsheads, firkins, kegs, kilderkins, tierces, rundlets, puncheons, pipes, tuns, butts, pins, troughs and breakers).
comparisons tuns butts puncheons hogsheads tierces barrels rundlets 11⁄4 21⁄4 31⁄4 41⁄4 61⁄4 81⁄4 141⁄4 1⁄2 11⁄4 1+1⁄2 21⁄4 31⁄4 41⁄4 71⁄4 1⁄3 2⁄3 11⁄4.
As Engraver-General of the French coinage from 1582, he provided the puncheons from which the dies used in every mint in France were taken.
The name 'Puncheon' is derived from the giant wooden casks, known as 'puncheons' in which the rum was stored.
42 puncheons, 116 tierces, and 27 barrels of sugar, 22 hogsheads and 17 puncheons of rum, 20 hogsheads and 33 tierces of coffee, and 20 puncheons of molasses.
least half a dozen citizens had already split out the wood, and had dried puncheons to make the floor.
The doors and window shutters were made of thick oak planks, or puncheons, and secured with stout bars of wood on the inside.
It was producing 300 hogsheads of sugar and 182 puncheons of rum.
net/lectures/04-history-of-building/puncheons-and-dragons.
hogshead puncheon, tertian pipe, butt tun 1 tun 1 2 pipes, butts 1 1+1⁄2 3 puncheons, tertians 1 1+1⁄3 2 4 hogsheads 1 1+1⁄2 2 3 6 tierces 1 1+1⁄3 2 2+2⁄3.
Commissioners of the Treasury succeeded Mr James Rotier in engraving the puncheons and the dyes for the coinage at the Tower and five country Mints, and.
Four of the five water-puncheons were lost, being stove-in by debris or having drifted away.
buckets, tubs, butter churns, vats, hogsheads, firkins, tierces, rundlets, puncheons, pipes, tuns, butts, troughs, pins and breakers.
When she arrived at Liverpool she brought with her 57 puncheons and one butt of palm oil, 50 barrels of pepper, 105 ivory tusks, eight.
He attempted to escape exile by offering Consul General Ralph Moor 200 puncheons (barrels) of oil worth £1500 at that time and to disclose where his 500.
on all occasions to draw this fine spirit from the original Highland puncheons, at 20s per imperial gallon; to bottle it at 44s per dozen, bottles inclusive.
more success than in France, and in 1626 he was commissioned to make puncheons and dies for 'certain pieces of largesse of gold and silver in memory.