I am starting a knitted infinity scarf and the pattern calls for quot;8 x 50g balls of chunky weight yarn suitable for 6mm needles.quot; How many skeins will I need? And what is the number of chunky weight yarn? 5 or 6, is it?Thanks in advance :)
Bonnet -hood Boot- trunk Biscuit- cookie Treacle-molasses Because English is a living language, it changes and innovatesDifferent cultures share the same basic language but use different slangs which also change in different culturesDifferent names for cutting edge products and innovations.
Mobile telephony is the provision of telephone services to phones which may move around freely rather than stay fixed in one locationMobile phones connect to a terrestrial cellular network of base stations (cell sites), whereas satellite phones connect to orbiting satellitesBoth networks are interconnected to the public switched telephone network (PSTN) to allow any phone in the world to be dialedThe telephone, theinstrument itself can be called mobile mobile phone, mobile, cell phone (North America), 'cell' (in Quebec in the vernacular), natel (Switzerland), GSM (in Belgium and Luxembourg), vini (French Polynesia)When it has advanced features, this is a smartphone
You need a total of 400 grams or 14 ounces of chunky weight yarnUsually Category 5 yarn is paired with 6 mm needlesHowever, there can be differences depending on the yarn's fiber content and how tightly it is spunI'd be more concerned with purchasing the correct yardage than with the correct weight and more concerned with matching the pattern's gauge than with the needle size or the yarn categoryFor example, I just bought yarn to cast on for a scarfI'm using yarn from the same size category but a different fiber content from the yarn used in the scarf test-knitted for the patternThe difference in the fiber content means that the yarn is about 15 yards shorter in a 50 g ball than the recommended yarn, and I had to buy more balls of yarn to equal the same yardage.
We speak British English, they speak American EnglishI could list many more examples.
Why is it called bonnet in England, but hood in the US.