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I torked a coat hanger !!!
Shakesthecoffecan:
This evening I have to retrieve a set of keys from under a deck where they had fallen. I untwisted a metal coat hanger and got them out, and then I torked it back in to shape, almost.
It make me think about how the story started out with the shirts hanging on a coat hanger in the closet, and the description in the trail head parking lot how they twisted one back into shape.
Penthesilea:
But for you, something was solved: you got your keys back. ;D
Ain't a wire hanger (coat hanger) a strange analogy? But everybody immediately gets the picture.
And the additional wire hanger for the shirts. Somehow I have the feeling the wire hanger is a smaller, tamed and thus harmless cousin to the tire iron.
Monika:
Good for you, Tru. You fixed it!
Sason:
Glad you got your keys back, Truman!
What's the difference between 'twisted' and 'torked'?
(i've never heard 'torked' before, and it's not in my dictionary)
Penthesilea:
--- Quote from: Sason on September 14, 2010, 03:57:48 am ---Glad you got your keys back, Truman!
What's the difference between 'twisted' and 'torked'?
(i've never heard 'torked' before, and it's not in my dictionary)
--- End quote ---
Correctly it's written 'torqued', resp. 'torque'. Should be in your dictionary.
I'd say it's a more technical term than twist. My dictionary lists endless technical terms with torque: torque arm, torque balance, torque compensator, torque converter, etc.
Here's what Merriam-Webster says:
Noun:
Definition of TORQUE
: a usually metal collar or neck chain worn by the ancient Gauls, Germans, and Britons
Variants of TORQUE
torque or torc \ˈtȯrk\
Origin of TORQUE
French, from Latin torques, from torquēre to twist — more at torture
First Known Use: 1695
Verb:
torqued torqu·ing
Definition of TORQUE
: to impart torque to : cause to twist (as about an axis)
— torqu·er noun
First Known Use of TORQUE
1959
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