plastering


Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
plaster/ˈplɑːstə(r)/
noun
  • 1 a soft mixture of lime with sand or cement and water for spreading on walls and ceilings to form a smooth hard surface when dried.
  • 2 (also plaster of Paris) a hard white substance made by the addition of water to powdered gypsum, used for holding broken bones in place and making sculptures and casts.
  • 3 (also sticking plaster) Brit. an adhesive strip of material for covering cuts and wounds.

    dated a bandage on which a poultice is spread for application.

verb
  • 1 cover with plaster; apply plaster to.
  • 2 coat or cover all over with something, especially to an excessive extent: a face plastered in heavy make-up.

    ■ display widely and conspicuously: her story was plastered all over the papers.

  • 3 apply a plaster cast to.
  • 4 informal, dated bomb or shell (a target) heavily.
– derivatives
plasterer noun,
plastery adjective.
– origin OE, denoting a bandage spread with a curative substance, from med. L. plastrum, from Gk emplastron ‘daub, salve’.
'plastering' also found in these Oxford entries:

Forum discussions with the word(s) "plastering" in the title:


Look up "plastering" at Merriam-Webster
Look up "plastering" at dictionary.com

In other languages: Spanish | French | Italian | Portuguese | German | Russian | Polish | Romanian | Czech | Greek | Turkish | Chinese | Japanese | Korean | Arabic

Download free Android and iPhone apps

Android AppiPhone App
Report an inappropriate ad.