Glue is any fluid adhesive, particularly a protein colloid prepared from animal tissue. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Wiktionary (a portmanteau of wiki and dictionary) is a multilingual, Web-based project to create a free content dictionary, available in over 150 languages. ... An adhesive is a compound that adheres or bonds two items together. ...
Glue may also refer to:
Glue (novel), a novel by Scottish writer Irvine Welsh.
Glue (series), an animated series by Wild Brain studios
In electronics and computing: Glue is a novel by Scottish writer Irvine Welsh. ...
In music: webMethods Glue is an enterprise web services platform from webMethods to provide web services/SOAP capabilities to existing java and c/c++ applications. ... A glue language is a programming language used for connecting software components together. ... In programming, glue code is code that does not compute anything functional towards meeting the programs requirements, but instead serves solely to glue together different parts of code that would otherwise not be compatible. ... In electronics, glue logic refers to the custom electronic circuitry needed to achive compatible interfaces between two (or more) differrent off-the-shelf integrated circuits. ...
Representing 3 area codes (Keene, NH, Cincinnati, OH, and Aurora, Illinois), 3 artists came together by coincidence. ... The Glue is a Swiss a cappella vocal band from Basel, founded in 1997. ...
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The purest form of fish glue, made from the membrane of the air bladder (swim bladder) of certain species of fish such as the sturgeon, is also called isinglass (fig.
Glues were produced from horns and hides of deer, hides of cow, and skins of fish.
Fish glue produced by boiling of the swim bladders of sturgeons was experimentally used by Van Dyck in his tempera paintings.