eyelets - meaning and definition. What is eyelets
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What (who) is eyelets - definition

RING OR EDGE STRIP INSERTED INTO A HOLE THROUGH THIN MATERIAL, TYPICALLY OF METAL OR PLASTIC
Eyelet; Eyelets; Gromet; Drop grommet; Drop Grommet; Gromets; Grummet; Grommets
  • [[Seaman's chest]] with grommets fashioned for use as handles

eyelet         
¦ noun a small round hole in leather or cloth for threading a lace, string, or rope through.
?a metal ring used to reinforce such a hole.
?a small hole with stitching around its edge, used as a form of decoration in embroidery.
¦ verb (eyelets, eyeleting, eyeleted) make eyelets in (fabric).
Origin
ME oilet, from OFr. oillet, dimin. of oil 'eye', from L. oculus.
eyelet         
n.
Perforation, aperture, eye, eyelet-hole.
Eyelet         
·noun A small hole or perforation to receive a cord or fastener, as in garments, sails, ·etc.
II. Eyelet ·noun A metal ring or grommet, or short metallic tube, the ends of which can be bent outward and over to fasten it in place;
- used to line an eyelet hole.

Wikipedia

Grommet

A grommet is a ring or edge strip inserted into a hole through thin material, typically a sheet of textile fabric, sheet metal or composite of carbon fiber, wood or honeycomb. Grommets are generally flared or collared on each side to keep them in place, and are often made of metal, plastic, or rubber. They may be used to prevent tearing or abrasion of the pierced material or protection from abrasion of the insulation on the wire, cable, line being routed through the penetration, and to cover sharp edges of the piercing, or all of the above.

A small grommet may also be called an eyelet, used for example on shoes, tarps and sails for lacing purposes.

Grommets in electrical applications are referred to as "insulating bushings". Most common are molded rubber bushings that are inserted into hole diameters up to 2″ (51 mm). There are many hole configurations from standard round to assorted U-shapes. Larger penetrations that are irregular in shape as well as long straight edges are often fitted with extruded or stamped strips of continuous length, referred to as "grommet edging". This type of protective bushings is quite common in applications that range from telecom switches and data center cabinets to complex and dense wire/cable and even hydraulic tubing in aircraft, transportation vehicles and medical equipment.

Examples of use of eyelets
1. As on Wednesday, the wing stalled in a particular section where NASA believes a wire is caught in some eyelets.
2. I could go on, I‘m having such fun, but I realise I‘m the only person who is, so I‘ll stop and let the great Thomas Pynchon have the last grave word: "He opens her closet, and in moonlight reflected from the mirror finds a crowded maze of satins, taffeta, lawn and pongee, dark fur collars and trimming, buttons, sashes, passementerie, soft, confusing, womanly tunnel systems that must stretch back for miles – he could be lost inside of half a minute ... lace glimmers, eyelets wink, a crepe scarf brushes his face ..." In the end, as in the beginning, it‘s the words, just the words.