What is the meaning of BOARDS. Phrases containing BOARDS
See meanings and uses of BOARDS!Slangs & AI meanings
someone who posts provocative messages on forums or message boards (n.) | to post provocative messages on forums or message boards (v.)
A shanty or small house of boards.
A decorative knot made on cylinder objects. Also, seen as a flattened version which is placed on decorative knot boards. A notable practical use for the Turk's head is to mark the "King Spoke" on a ship's wheel.
Woodie is American slang for an estate car, a station wagon.Woodie is American slang for a vehicle used by a surfer to transport people and boards to the beach.
floor base boards, moudlings
Boards is British slang for playing cards.
Rank markings. Short for "shoulder boards".
Speed brakes extended
interstices between logs or boards of a house
A rude sort of sleigh, or oblong box made of boards and placed on runners, used for drawing loads on snow by horses.
a pile of timber; logs or boards tied together to float passengers on a river or the ocean
A term applied by lumbermen, dealers in timber, and carpenters, to boards which are inclined to split from defects in the log from which they have been sawed.
Surfer girls, chicks with sticks, or babes on boards. Example: “What’s with all the Gidgets taking over the Point?
Southeast Asia huts. Standard-designed buildings of corrigated tin roofs; walls of horizontal-louvered boards four feet up from the bottom, and screen from the bottom to the roof inside; some were on concrete pads and some were on blocks; some had sandbags around them about 30 inches from the wall and waist high; you could walk inside the sandbags from door to door; wooden walkways between buildings so you didn't have to walk in mud; a few sandbags were place on the roofs to keep them from blowing away in a hurricane.
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n.
Boards adapted or intended for such use.
v. t.
To cover with sarking, or thin boards.
n.
Thin boards for sheathing, as above the rafters, and under the shingles or slates, and for similar purposes.
v. t.
To nail boards upon so as to lap one over another, in order to exclude rain, snow, etc.
n.
The act or occupation of covering or lining with boards in panel.
n.
A set of boards for a sugar box.
n.
One whose occupation is to saw timber into planks or boards, or to saw wood for fuel; a sawer.
n.
The first covering of boards on the outside wall of a frame house or on a timber roof; also, the material used for covering; ceiling boards in general.
n.
Hence, a line of junction; a joint; a suture, as on a ship, a floor, or other structure; the line of union, or joint, of two boards, planks, metal plates, etc.
n.
A temporary structure of timber, boards, etc., for various purposes, as for supporting workmen and materials in building, for exhibiting a spectacle upon, for holding the spectators at a show, etc.
v. t.
To case or cover with something which protects, as thin boards, sheets of metal, and the like; as, to sheathe a ship with copper.
v. t.
To form by cutting with a saw; as, to saw boards or planks, that is, to saw logs or timber into boards or planks; to saw shingles; to saw out a panel.
n.
A lining of planks or boards (rarely of metal) for protecting an embankment.
v. t.
To join means of a tongue and grove; as, to tongue boards together.
n.
The covering or siding of a building, formed of boards lapping over one another, to exclude rain, snow, etc.
n.
A certain quantity of fur skins, as of martens, ermines, sables, etc., packed between boards; being in some cases forty skins, in others one hundred and twenty; -- called also timmer.
a.
Waning or diminished in some parts; not of uniform size throughout; -- said especially of sawed boards or timber when tapering or uneven, from being cut too near the outside of the log.
v. t.
To line with boards or panelwork, or as if with panelwork; as, to wainscot a hall.
n.
A cover or screen which a body of troops formed with their shields or targets, by holding them over their heads when standing close to each other. This cover resembled the back of a tortoise, and served to shelter the men from darts, stones, and other missiles. A similar defense was sometimes formed of boards, and moved on wheels.
n.
A tree that furnished the precious wood of which the ark, tables, altars, boards, etc., of the Jewish tabernacle were made; -- now believed to have been the wood of the Acacia Seyal, which is hard, fine grained, and yellowish brown in color.
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