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Tie Downs, Straps
A strap, sometimes also called strop, is an elongated flap or ribbon, usually of fabric or leather. more...
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Word Origins
"Strop" is the older form of strap, recorded since 1357 as loop or strap on a harness; strap appeared only since 1620 as a Scottish and/or nautical variant of 'strope.' The word "strop" probably derives from the Old French estrop, itself from the Latin stroppus "strap, band," perhaps from Etruscan, ultimately from Greek strophos "twisted band," from strephein "to turn".
Strap
Television industry form of Motion graphics.
A narrow horizontal onscreen graphic device for holding text information over live action. Often just a name or caption but sometimes with scrolling information such as rolling credits or a News ticker. Usually in the lower part of the screen known as the lower third, straps can be animated, faded or just cut on and off. Commonly known in US as Lower thirds (where there is a more detailed description) and also in UK as astons Aston Broadcast Systems.

Binding straps
Thin straps are used as part of clothing or baggage, or bedding such as a sleeping bag. See for example spaghetti strap, shoulder strap. A strap differs from a belt mainly in that a strap is usually integral to the item of clothing; either can be used in combination with buckles.
Straps are also used as fasteners to attach and bind items, to objects, animals (for example a saddle on a horse) and people, or even to tie down people and animals, as on an apparatus for corporal punishment. Occasionally a strap is specified after what it binds or holds, e.g. chin strap.
Disciplinary strapping
As an implement of severe physical punishment, which is then called strapping after it (alongside more general terms as lashing, and confusingly, even in some official language, words like belting -in principle a belt is lighter, without a handle-, whipping and even paddling, all strictly speaking reserved for other implements), it is a particularly, broad and heavy strip of leather whipping device often with a hard handle while the more flexible 'blade' whips the flesh of the victim. Probably because of the stiffness the word is sometimes used interchangeably with a leather paddle (spanking). Instead of having one specially made one can also, especially in a private sphere, use an object of the same stirrup leather, say in a stable; like the Scottish tawse (which is a forked version with two or more tails) both are likely to be suppllied by a saddlemaker.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
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