The bottom of the body of a plow; -- called also slade; also, the bottom of a furrow.
The horny substance under a horse's foot, which protects the more tender parts.
The bottom of an embrasure.
The seat or bottom of a mine; -- applied to horizontal veins or lodes.
To furnish with a sole; as, to sole a shoe.
The plate like object at the bottom of a pipe or practice chanter. Soles used to be ubiquitous, but their use has fallen away. On pipe chanters they are generally about 2 7/8" in diameter, and 1/2" in thickness. The end is flush with the bottom of the chanter. They are made of ivory, art. ivory, or metal.
The bottom part of the shoe. Usually made with the grain side of the leather in contact with the ground. If there is a heel, the waist of the sole does not actually touch the ground. If the shoe has a separate heel (q.v.) the bottom section of this next to the ground is called the "top-piece". [Holme, 1688][Thornton/Swann, 1983] In medieval Latin, this is Solea. Thomas Wright, in his commentary on John of Garland, Dictionarius, refers to Semelles and Semeus. Sole/bottom An all-inclusive term for the parts of the shoe under the foot. [Goubitz, 2001] A component in the lower part of the shoe. Single-soled shoes have only a top sole, which makes contact with the ground. Double-soled shoes have a top sole and a middle sole. [Vass
the lower surface of the foot - see soleus.
The base of the club head.
The internal, bottom surface of a roof gutter.
the only part of the cowboy boot, besides the bottom of the heel, that actually has contact with the ground, unless you happen to get thrown off a horse or a bull.
The bottom layer of the hoof.
The bottom part of a shoe, not including the heel.
The bottom of the clubhead.
Another word for outsole, the bottom part of the shoe
the underside of footwear or a golfclub
the underside of the foot
put a new sole on; "sole the shoes"
(soling)- the inner lining of a water wheel, forming bottom of the bucket. Also called drum board, sole boards.
Bottom part of the golf clubhead that sits on the ground when a player is addressing the ball.
the flat, muscular undersurface of the foot of a gastropod
The bottom or underside of any type of golf club. It is where the club rests on the ground in playing position.
the part of the club that touches the ground.
The bottom of the club head
The bottom of a club or the point of the club that touches the ground at address.
The bottom piece of pieces of leather or other material of footwear. When used as a collective term, it includes the complete bottom part of the shoe, except the heel.
When referring to equipment, it is the bottom of a club. (The sole of his wedge had become rusty over the winter). When referring to the swing, it is the point when the sole of the club touches the ground at address. (When he soled his club, the ball moved and he called a penalty on himself).
1. Cabin or saloon floor 2. Timber extensions on the bottom of the rudder 3. The molded fiberglass deck of a cockpit
The inferior surface of the foot.
The bottom part of the clubs head.
The sole is the bottom of the foot and is one of the two areas of the human body which grow no vellus hair. A set of creases, formed in the womb, criss-cross the sole. In anatomy, the sole of the foot is referred to as the plantar aspect.