rivet

برشام
definition
verb
the linings are bonded, not riveted, to the brake shoes for longer wear
join or fasten (plates of metal or other material) with a rivet or rivets.
noun
‘For one, I just went to the hardware store and bought sheet metal, rivets and screws, and bolts and nuts’ he said.
a short metal pin or bolt for holding together two plates of metal, its headless end being beaten out or pressed down when in place.
translation of 'rivet'
verb
برشم,
لفت الانتباه,
ثبت بإحكام,
ثبت ببرشام,
جذب
noun
مسمار,
برشام
example
‘We model everything down to the minutest detail,’ Masefield says, ‘including each and every 'rivet' .’
The ‘sizzle cymbal’ has a series of holes drilled in it, each loosely holding a 'rivet' ; a sizzling sound is produced when the cymbal is struck.
the grip on her arm was firm enough to 'rivet' her to the spot
It is a relatively strong, efficient, good-looking and convenient 'rivet' .
Boeing also aims to assemble each 7E7 in three days, compared with the 20 or so it takes to weld and 'rivet' a 767.
The next movement, a tedious and far too expansive Ländler, does not 'rivet' the listener's attention like the first.
The pop 'rivet' itself looks something like a nail with a flanged metal sleeve over one end.
They would cut these cans in half and others would 'rivet' and weld the feet on to the cans and they were then turned into cooking stoves.
It may occasionally go a bit far; it may not surprise you with every single twist; but the story, witty dialogue, and acting will 'rivet' you.
the grip on her arm was firm enough to 'rivet' her to the spot
The wooden foundations and a prevalence of ground water has caused subsidence ever since, and in 1993 a 'rivet' fell from the metal skeleton.
This entailed drilling a hole in each bullet to take the 'rivet' .
If the 'rivet' is too short, there is not enough material to form a satisfactory blind side (shop-formed) head.
a device for punching 'rivet' holes
You go out there and you have to 'rivet' the attention of the audience.
And it is to 'rivet' this detail in our mind that at this point Defoe describes Crusoe's wardrobe.
a rectangular plate containing an iron 'rivet'
Thus Art Deco architectural elements, 'riveted' beams of steel bridges, and classical sculptural reliefs appear in tondos that float on scenes of Oregon as it was encountered by explorers and pioneers.
‘They count the 'rivets' and analyze the position of the nose guns’ she said.
The original Victorian cast iron structure has been stripped back and exposed, its 'riveted' , pitted hulk like a decaying ship's hull.
According to the 2nd-century ad traveller Pausanias, the process involved hammering sheets of metal into the shape of a figure and 'riveting' them together over a solid core.
The extensions are actually part of each side of the saw clamp, 'riveted' together at the outer end.
During the war, Jim enlisted to serve in Egypt with the army while Edna worked as an aircraft 'riveter' at Fairey Engineering.
Bobby Darin's life in Beyond The Sea, while extraordinary on its own terms, lacks a dramatic arc needed to produce a really 'riveting' film.
The play had been a huge success, 'riveting' most everyone who saw it.
‘I can't remember the last time I dealt with a welder or a 'riveter' ,’ says John Daly, a local training advisor.
Kids who have never been in an art museum before are 'riveted' by the experience, lingering far longer than adults as they puzzle out the meanings of a single work.
One of the BBC's most 'rivetingly' beautiful natural history series, The Blue Planet, was Best Documentary Series.
It is a work of embarrassing, even repulsive power that 'rivets' your eyes.
It was the beginning of almost three years of slave labour, first in Java, then on the Japanese mainland where he became a 'riveter' in the giant Mitsubishi shipyard in Nagasaki.
Credits: Google Translate