Jute, Jut′ish adj. It forms an integral part of the Indian Textile Industry. jute In textile and jute industries, sardars were labour contractors and their status depended on how many labour hands they brought to the industry.
Dundee was ‘Juteopolis’ – synonymous with its main industry. a style of popular music for dancing, usually recorded and with complex electronic instrumentation, in which simple, repetitive lyrics are subordinated to a heavy, pulsating, rhythmic beat. It is a natural fiber comprised with silky and golden shine. Jute is a coarse vegetable or bast fiber traditionally used to make Burlap or Hessian and Gunny Bags. Jute is known as the Golden fiber of Bangladesh. [From Middle English Jutes, the Jutes, from Medieval Latin Iutae, from Old English Iotas, Iutan; akin to Old English Gēat, Geat.]
The Government of India has included the Jute Industry for special attention in its National Common Minimum Programme. a song or ode in praise or honor of God, a deity, a nation, etc. Jute (jo͞ot) n. A member of a Germanic people who invaded Britain in the fifth and sixth centuries ad and settled in the south and southeast and on the Isle of Wight.
Jute had a glorious industrial history in Dundee, Scotland.
The major species of Jute are Corchorus capsularis and Corchorus olitorius. Further, the Jute industry contributes to the national exchequer from exports & taxes. Juteunknown. This association of place and product was not unusual. jute (jo͞ot) n. 1. From Cambridge English Corpus Among jute workers … It is one of the most cheapest and economical vegetable fiber after cotton, obtained from the skin or bast of plant’s stem. The Indian Jute Industry is a very old & predominant in the eastern part of India. We still link Clydebank with ships, Sheffield with steel, Stoke-on-Trent with pottery, even if such industries have now dwindled to a fraction of their former size or disappeared completely.
Recyclable, 100% bio degradable and eco-friendly jute has low extensibility and high tensile strength.