Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Neatsfoot oil is more useful for routine use on working equipment.
Sometimes 60% of the lanolin was replaced by neatsfoot oil.
I bought Neatsfoot oil, which, rumor in the neighborhood had it, the big leaguers used.
She walked down the next aisle, reading the labels on cans and bottles: Neatsfoot oil.
This characteristic of neatsfoot oil allows it to soak easily into leather.
Neatsfoot oil is used in metalworking industries as a cutting fluid for aluminium.
Neatsfoot oil is used as a conditioning, softening and preservative agent for leather.
Neatsfoot oil is used on a number of leather products, although it has been replaced by synthetic products for certain applications.
If mineral oil or other petroleum-based material is added, the product may be called "neatsfoot oil compound".
The inside surface had been thoroughly rubbed with a paste of neatsfoot oil and graphite, to give a frictionless draw.
The air filled with the warm smells of boiled oats and neatsfoot oil and steaming horses.
Fat from warm-blooded animals normally has a high melting point, becoming hard when cool - but neatsfoot oil remains liquid at room temperature.
It combines the memories of old youth, like the smell of new-mown grass and neatsfoot oil, with new youth's expectations.
If used on important historical objects, neatsfoot oil (like other leather dressings) can oxidize with time and contribute to embrittling.
"Neatsfoot oil.
"Does neatsfoot oil burn?
Neatsfoot oil is a yellow oil rendered and purified from the shin bones and feet (but not the hooves) of cattle.
Frequent oiling of leather, with mink oil, neatsfoot oil, or a similar material keeps it supple and improves its lifespan dramatically.
Items such as baseball gloves, saddles, horse harnesses and other horse tack can be softened and conditioned with neatsfoot oil.
Neatsfoot oil is one traditional conditioner, and products containing beeswax are popular in some areas, but there are also many other commercial blends of conditioning products available.
Saddle soap is a preparatory compound containing mild soap and softening ingredients such as neatsfoot oil, glycerin, and lanolin.
It is also known as In Scotland and elsewhere as Need-fire or Neatsfire from an old word for cattle retained in the name "Neatsfoot oil".
Other obsolete terms for cattle include "neat" (this use survives in "neatsfoot oil", extracted from the feet and legs of cattle), and "beefing" (young animal fit for slaughter).
Neatsfoot oil is often used to oil sign-writers' brushes that have been used in oil based paint, as this oil is non drying and can be easily washed out with solvent at any time.