A hinge mortise has no tenon |
According to Worth,
"A mortise is a cavity or hole that is cut into wood or stone, and is specially intended to receive a tenon, or protrusion, on another piece of wood or stone."
What we will argue, on the other hand, is that Maggie did a lousy job of research, stopping with the first definition in some online dictionary. In point of fact, a mortise is any pocket or recess in wood (or, we suppose, stone) cut to make room for a part or assembly of parts. It's a pretty safe bet that there is a mortise, without any tenon, within a few feet of where you sit at this very moment. We can say that because the hinges on most wooden doors are set in small pockets: mortises. Speaking of doors, a fair number of door locksets are – you guessed it – mortised into the edge of the door.
Worth got what she said right. Maggie's problem is that she quit too soon, quit after seeing the definition of a mortise and tenon joint. Had she been a little more careful... heck, if Maggie had had the slightest idea what she was writing about! our Dumbass of the Day would have done a better job and covered the full answer to "What is a mortise?"
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DD - WOODWORKING
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