screed

suomi-englanti sanakirja

screed englannista suomeksi

  1. tasoite

  2. jaarittelu

  3. vuodatus

  1. teksti, vuodatus

  2. arvostelu, palopuhe

  3. tasoituspalkki

  4. tasoitin

  5. lattialaasti

  6. tasoittaa

  7. louhikkoinen

screed englanniksi

  1. A piece or narrow strip cut or torn off from a larger whole; a shred. (defdate)

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (quote-book) J. Ridgeway,(nb...)|year=1813|page=13|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=69wyAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA13|oclc=611172581|passage="Weel done!" cried Mrs. Smith. "I trow ye gae her a screed o' your mind!"

  4. (quote-journal) (w)(nb...)|year=1824|volume=XI|issue=XLVII|page=472|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=SzQaAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA472|oclc=7489271|passage=The housewife hastens in the gleaming sun, / With watering-pan to sprinkle when it needs / The bleaching cloth which her own fingers spun, / Stretch'd on the orchard sward in whitening screeds; ...

  5. (quote-book)

  6. A piece of land, especially one that is narrow.

  7. (quote-book)|series=35 III of the United Kingdom|George III, chapter 107|location=London|publisher=[(w)]|year=1795|pages=25–26|pageurl=https://books.google.com?books?id=CZYseHUAh7gC&pg=PA25|oclc=316776953|passage=And it be further Enacted, That in all Caſes where any of the Lands and Grounds by this Act intended to be divided and incloſed ſhall adjoin on any Freeboard, Screed, or Parcel of Land left on the Outſide of the Fences of any adjoining Pariſh, Townſhip, or Place, which ſhall run into any of the Lands intended to be incloſed by virtue of this Act, ſuch Freeboard, Screed, or Parcel of Land ſhall be deemed and taken to be Parcel of the Lands hereby directed to be divided and incloſed, ...

  8. A rent, a tear.

  9. (RQ:Burns Poems)

  10. A piece of writing (such as an article, letter, or list) or a speech, especially if long.

  11. (RQ:Scott Tales of My Landlord 1)

  12. A speech or piece of writing which contains angry and extended criticism. (defdate)

  13. (quote-book)&93; had finished the first part of his novel ''(w)'', and printed it, the publishers would have nothing to do with it. They claimed they had been deluded into accepting a villainous and blasphemous screed against religion and morality and all right living.

  14. (quote-journal)

  15. ''Chiefly in the plural form'' (l): a large quantity.

  16. (senseid) (non-gloss definition)

  17. A tool, usually a long strip of wood or other material, placed on a floor to be covered with concrete, a wall to be plastered, etc., as a guide for producing a smooth, flat surface.

  18. (quote-book)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=(...) Lafever|Minard Lafever and James Gallier,(nb...) Stanley & Co.,(nb...)|year=1833|page=42|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=bwlAAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA42|oclc=166596565|passage=When applied to large surfaces, strips or screeds of wood should be fixed to float from; and when the plain surface is formed, it is finished with the handfloat.

  19. (quote-book), in plastering, is a stile formed of lime and hair, about seven or eight inches wide, gauged exactly true. In floated-work these screed are made at every three or four feet distance, vertically round a room, and are prepared perfectly straight by applying the straight-edge to them to make them so; and when all the screeds are formed, the parts between them are filled up flush with lime and hair, or ''stuff'', and made even with the face of the screeds. The straight-edge is then worked horizontally upon the screeds, to take off all superfluous ''stuff''.

  20. A tool such as a long strip of wood or other material which is drawn over a wet layer of concrete, plaster, etc., to make it smooth and flat; also, a machine that achieves this effect; a screeder.

  21. A smooth, flat layer of concrete, plaster, or similar material, especially if acting as a base for stones, tiles, wooden planks, etc.

  22. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper,(nb...)|year=1830|page=615|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=wTM9ggFv-k8C&pg=PA615|oclc=78047284|passage=Two workmen, provided with a tub of putty and a quantity of plaster of Paris, proceed to run the cornice. Before using the mould, they gauge a screed of putty and plaster upon the wall and ceiling, covering so much of each as will correspond with the top and bottom of the intended cornice. On this screed one or two slight deal straight-edges, adapted to as many notches or chases made in the mould for it to work upon, are nailed.

  23. To rend, to shred, to tear.

  24. To read or repeat from memory fluently or glibly; to off.

  25. (quote-book)|location=Glasgow|publisher=(...) Chapman & Lang, for Thomas Stewart,(nb...)|year=1801|page=48|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=eUsJAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA48|oclc=1003889846|passage=He'll ſcreed you aff calling|Effectual Calling, / As faſt as ony in the dwalling.— ...

  26. (RQ:Nicoll Poems)

  27. To use a (l) to produce a smooth, flat surface of concrete, plaster, or similar material; also to put down a layer of concrete, plaster, etc.

  28. (quote-book) (company)|editor=Louis G. Silano; Arnold C. Henderson|title=Bridge Inspection and Rehabilitation: A Practical Guide|location=New York, N.Y.; Chichester, West Sussex|publisher=(publisher)|John Wiley & Sons|year=1993|page=38|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=lOo5pgTLWj4C&pg=RA1-PA38|column=1|isbn=978-0-471-53262-0|passage=Immediately after shotcreting, the repair surfaces should be screeded to remove high areas and to expose low areas. Low areas should be filled with a subsequent spray to ensure a true flat surface. After screeding, the entire surface should be given a flashcoat finish, unless a finish coat is specified.

  29. To become rent or torn.

  30. (RQ:Scott Rob Roy)

  31. A (discordant) sound or tune played on bagpipes, a fiddle, or a pipe.

  32. (quote-book) Alexander Leadbetter, for the author; and sold by Creech|William Creech,(nb...)|year=1811|page=123|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=bLIDAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA123|oclc=13315703|passage="Wi' hat in hand," sweet lass, quo I, / "Wer't in my power to sooth thy sigh, / My hame-bor'd whistle I wad try, / An' gie't a screed, / Atween whar Tiviot murmurs by, / An' bonny Tweed."

  33. The sound of something scratching or tearing.

  34. (quote-book) the author; and sold by Murray (publisher)|John Murray,(nb...); and Creech|William Creech,(nb...)|year=1789|pages=34|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=NtdbAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA4|oclc=642495697|passage=Right o'er the ſteep he leans, / When his well-pleniſh'd king-hood voiding needs; / And, ſploiting, ſtrikes the ſtane his grany hit, / Wi' piſtol ſcreed, ſhot frae his gorlin doup.— ...

  35. To play bagpipes, a fiddle, or a pipe.

  36. (quote-book)|location=Dublin|publisher=(...) J. Carson(nb...)|date=(J2G)|year_published=1732|page=22|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=ihxgAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA22|oclc=642623887|passage=Twa Cheels we White Sarks, and a wee Wean with a white Sark got aboon whar the Whiſtle-Pipes war, the yen lilted, and the other Skirled and Screeded till them, and ſtill I ſweeted, I thought they never wad hea done.

  37. To make a discordant or harsh scratching or tearing sound.

  38. To play (a sound or tune) on bagpipes, a fiddle, or a pipe.

  39. (quote-book) Alexander Leadbetter, for the author; and sold by Creech|William Creech,(nb...)|year=1811|page=29|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=bLIDAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA29|oclc=13315703|passage=In life's gay morn, or youthfu' prime, / Ere fancy droops her wing, / Screed up your reed, for that's the time / For bards to rant and sing; ...

  40. Strewn with scree.

  41. (ux)

  42. (quote-book) pseudonym|title=The Creed of Violence|location=Berkeley, Calif.|publisher=(publisher)|Counterpoint|year=2009|page=172|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=JB3NQv0GIFUC&pg=PA172|isbn=978-1-58243-525-1|passage=Son and father reached the mouth of the canyon and were leading their mounts on foot up a screed hill face that looked down on the tracks.