TILING
TI'LING, participle present tense Covering with tiles.TI'LING, noun A roof covered with tiles. Luke 5:19.1. Tiles in general.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
2.778 entradas
TI'LING, participle present tense Covering with tiles.TI'LING, noun A roof covered with tiles. Luke 5:19.1. Tiles in general.
TILL, noun A vetch; a tare. [Local.]TILL
TILL'ABLE, adjective Capable of being tilled; arable; fit for the plow.
TILL'AGE, noun The operation, practice or art of preparing land for seed, and keeping the ground free from weeds which might impede the growth of crops. tillage includes manurin...
TILL'ED, participle passive Cultivated; prepared for seed and kept clean.TILL'ER, noun One who tills; a husbandman; a cultivator; a plowman.1. The bar or lever employed to turn ...
TILL'ER, noun A money box in a shop; a drawer.TILL, prep or adverb1. To the time or time of. I did not see the man till the last time he came; I waited for him till four o'clock...
TILL'ER-ROPE, noun The rope which forms a communication between the fore end of the tiller and the wheel.
TILL'ERING, participle present tense Sending out new shoots round the bottom of the original stem.TILLERING, noun The act of sending forth young shoots from the root or around t...
TILL'ING, participle present tense Cultivating.TILL'ING, noun The operation of cultivating land; culture.
TILL'MAN, noun A man who tills the earth; a husbandman.
TILL'Y-FALLYTILL'Y-VALLY, adverb or adjective A word formerly used when any thing said was rejected as trifling or impertinent.
TILL'Y-VALLY, adv. or a. A word formerly used when any thing said was rejected as trifling or impertinent.
TILT, noun1. A tent; a covering over head.2. The cloth covering of a cart or wagon.3. The cover of a boat; a small canopy or awning of canvas or other cloth, extended over the s...
TILT'-HAMMER, noun [tilt and hammer.] A heavy hammer used in iron works, which is lifted by a wheel.
TILT'ED, participle passive Inclined; made to stoop; covered with cloth or awning.1. Hammered; prepared by beating; as steel.
TILT'ER, noun One who tilts; one who uses the exercise of pushing a lance on horseback; one who fights.Let me alone to match your tilter1. One who hammers with a tilt.
TILTH, noun That which is tilled; tillage ground. [Not in use.]1. The state of being tilled or prepared for a crop. We say, land is in good tilth when it is manured, plowed, bro...
TILT'ING, participle present tense Inclining; causing to stoop or lean; using the game of thrusting with the lance on horseback; also, hammering with a tilt-hammer.
TIM'BAL, noun A kettle drum.
TIM'BER, noun [Latin domus, a house; Gr. the body.]1. That sort of wood which is proper for building or for tools, utensils, furniture, carriages, fences, ships and the like. We...
TIM'BER-HEAD, noun [timber and head.] In ships, the top end of a timber, rising above the gunwale, and serving for belaying ropes, etc.; otherwise called kevelhead.
TIM'BER-SOW, noun A worm in wood.
TIM'BER-TREE, noun [timber and tree.] A tree suitable for timber.
TIM'BER-WORK, noun [timber and work.] Work formed of wood.
TIM'BER-Y'ARD, noun [timber and yard.] A yard or place where timber is deposited.
TIM'BERED, participle passive or adjective Furnished with timber; as a well timbered house. In the United States, we say, land is well timbered when it is covered with good timb...
TIM'BERING, participle present tense Furnishing with timber.