Word of the Day
Mar. 14th, 2020 08:18 am![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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SATURDAY, MARCH 14
Scantling
[SKANT-ling]Part of speech: noun
Origin: old french, early 16th century
- A specimen, sample, or small amount of something.
- The size to which a piece of wood or stone is measured and cut.
Examples of Scantling in a sentence
- There's only a scantling of milk left, so please pick up a new carton.
- The shed door was built to a scantling of 7 feet tall.
About Scantling
In addition to describing a small amount, scantling can apply to measurements of all sizes in woodworking or building. It can be the size of a certain cut of wood or stone. Or it could be a set of standard dimensions in shipbuilding. Then scantling could also just be a name for a particular type of wood. Use your context clues to decipher the scantling.
Did you Know?
Scantling, a little bit of something, comes from the Old French word "escantillon," which means sample. While the words look very similar, scant (barely amounting to a specified number or quantity) does not share this root. Scant comes from the Od Norse word "skammr," meaning short.