How to use in-sentence of “linen”:
+ Later, after 40 days the body was wrapped in linen bandages.
+ Joseph of Arimathea took the body of Jesus, wrapped it in a clean linen shroud, and placed it in his own new tomb that had been carved in the rock.
+ It is woven in silk, linen and even synthetic materials.
+ The cloth was made from wool, linen or hemp.
+ It was also home to a cotton and linen industry lime and alkali pits, and brewing.
+ People learned to use linen as paper raw material and to use starch made from flour as an additive.
Example sentences of “linen”:
+ Thomas Edison tested methods of using metals on linen paper.
+ Most weavers use a natural warp thread such as linen or cotton.
+ In recent centuries linen has largely been replaced by cotton and synthetic materials, which are cheaper.
+ Anmanari and other senior women in the community began painting for Irrunytju Arts on linen canvases.
+ The most common use of the water wheel was to mill flour in gristmills, but other uses included foundry work and machining, and pounding linen for use in paper.
+ After coming out of the natron, the bodies were coated inside and out with resin to preserve them, then wrapped with linen bandages, embedded with religious amulets and talismans.
+ Sarah Heaney was called Sarah McCann before she married Patrick Heaney, and her relations worked to make cloth in the linen industry.
+ Kimono are usually made of silk, but there are cotton, polyester, hemp and linen kimono as well.
+ The hole was then filled with linen and spices and the body was left under salt to become dry.
+ Thomas Edison tested methods of using metals on linen paper.
+ Most weavers use a natural warp thread such as linen or cotton.
+ In recent centuries linen has largely been replaced by cotton and synthetic materials, which are cheaper.
+ She was usually shown wearing a white linen dress.
+ The museum has one of the oldest pieces of linen from Egypt, made about 5000 BC.
+ It tells the story of Silas Marner, a lonely linen weaver.
+ Starch was used in Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries to stiffen the collars and ruffs of the fine linen which surrounded the neck.
+ The Liber Linteus Zagrabiensis Latin languageLatin: “Linen Book of Zagreb” or “Book of Etruscan text and the only existing linen book.
+ In the 18th century, the linen and embroidery industry was established in Arbon.
+ Flax has been an important crop for thousands of years, because linen cloth is made from it.