rope

     

A rope is a length of fibers, twiste or braided together to improve strength for pulling and connecting. It has tensile strength but is too flexible to provide compressive strength (i.e., it can be used for pulling, not pushing). Rope is thicker and stronger than similarly constructed cord, line, string, or twine. Common materials for rope include natural fibers such as Manila hemp, hemp, linen, cotton, coir, jute, and sisal. Synthetic fibers in use for rope-making include polypropylene, nylon, polyesters (e.g. PET, Vectran), polyethylene (e.g. Spectra) and Aramids (e.g. Twaron, Technora and Kevlar). Some ropes are constructed of mixtures of several fibres or use co-polymer fibres. Ropes can also be made out of metal fibers. Ropes have been constructed of other fibrous materials such as silk, wool, and hair, but such ropes are not generally available. Rayon is a regenerated fiber used to make decorative rope.

Trivia about rope

  • Give someone enough of this & he'll hang himself with it
  • "Pore"
  • (Sarah of the Clue Crew) Ranulf Flambard, the first prisoner at the Tower, escaped using this, smuggled to him in a wine casket
  • Will Rogers admired Vincente Oropeza, who introduced tricks using this in Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show
  • Give a person enough of this & he'll hang himself
  • Early gymnastic events included club swinging & the speed climbing of one of these
  • Cordage of braided strands of hemp
  • Now no longer in the Games, an early Olympic gymnastic event was the speed climbing of one of these
  • This 1948 film inspired by a real murder was Alfred Hitchcock's first movie in color
  • John Dall & Farley Granger strangle a college friend just for thrills in this, Hitch's first color film

Found pages about rope