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JuteOld English Eotas, Iutas (plural), one of the ancient Germanic inhabitants of Jutland, the peninsula between modern Germany and Denmark, who, with the Angles and Saxons invaded Britain in 5c.. Traditi [..]
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Jutename of a plant fiber used in making coarse fabrics and paper, and the plant which produces it, 1746, from Bengali jhuto, ultimately from Sanskrit juta-s "twisted hair, matted hair," related [..]
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JuteAn Indian BAST FIBER used for the manufacture of coarse sacking, bags, and string. Old sacking and bags are used as raw materials in papermaking.
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JuteA long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse, strong threads. It is produced from plants in the genus Corchorus, family Tiliaceae. Jute is one of the cheapest natural fibres and is second only to cotton in amount produced and variety of uses. Jute fibres are composed primarily of the plant materials cellulose (major component of [..]
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Jute100% biodegradable, sustainable, renewable and recyclable, jute fibers can be woven into rope, twine, rugs, curtains, mats, accessories, luggage, packaging and even clothing. Jute fibers are spun into threads that can range from coarse to silky fine. Threads created from jute are exceptionally strong and also possess insulating and antistatic quali [..]
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JuteThe fibre obtained from either of two Asian plants (Corchorus capsularis or C. olitorius) used for cordage and to create oakum.
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Juteone of the cheapest natural fibres available to make rope from and has been used for that purpose for centuries; or, if you've ever brought a burlap or gunny sack aboard, you've used jute. Y [..]
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JuteJute is a bast fiber plant native to India that contains coarse fibers most often used for products such as coffee sacks , rope, mats and on the soles of shoes like espadrilles. Finer jute fibers are [..]
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JuteA long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse, strong threads. It's used sometimes to make canvas, burlap and twine.
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Jute
The coarse, strong fiber of the East Indian plant, Corchorus olitorius|species|noshow=1, used to make mats, paper, gunny cloth etc.
The plants from which this fibre is obtained.
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Jute
A member of the Germanic tribe that existed in modern-day Denmark that invaded England about the same time as the Angles and the Saxons in the beginning of the Middle Ages, but were eventually eithe [..]
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