Definition of Manshifts

1. manshift [n] - See also: manshift

Lexicographical Neighbors of Manshifts

mansard
mansard roof
mansard roofs
mansarded
mansards
manscape
manscaped
manscapes
manscaping
manse
manservant
manservants
manses
mansfieldite
manshift
manshifts (current term)
manship
manshiply
mansion
mansion house
mansionary
mansionette
mansionettes
mansionization
mansionlike
mansionry
mansions
mansioun
mansiouns
manslaught

Literary usage of Manshifts

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Transactions of the International Engineering Congress, 1915 (1916)
"Thus, the attendance of the distillation furnaces in Rheinland and Belgium requires 1.75 to 2.5 manshifts per ton of roasted ore. while in America the ..."

2. The Metallurgy of Zinc and Cadmium by Walter Renton Ingalls (1903)
"The lola furnace of 620 retorts is therefore operated by only 21 manshifts per 24 hours and 17 men during the maneuver, ..."

3. Whitney's "Choice of Emblemes.": A Fac-simile Reprint by Geffrey Whitney (1866)
"... or of Palmer's edition of manshifts History of Great vol. ¡;. pp. m- Yarmouth, where a short life of the judge is given. ..."

4. Preliminary Report on Petroleum in Alaska by George Curtis Martin (1921)
"The mine was operated 239 days, employing an average of 43 men underground and 50 men on the surface, which gave a total of 8835 manshifts underground and ..."

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