Definition, Betydelse, Synonymer & Anagram | Engelska ordet LATH


LATH

Definition av LATH

  1. långt, tunt och smalt trästycke, ribba, spjäla, läkt

1

2

Antal bokstäver

4

Är palindrom

Nej

5
AT
ATH
LA
LAT
TH

83

6

224

31
AH
AHL
AHT
AL
ALT
AT
ATH
ATL


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Exempel på hur du använder LATH i en mening

  • By the 1850s the town had 14 single-saw mills, three gang-saw (multiple-saw) mills, four clapboard mills, four lath mills, and three shingle mills.
  • When the population was 603 in 1858, industries included a gristmill, sawmill and clapboard, shingle and lath machines.
  • In 1859, businesses included four sawmills, three shingle mills, two lath mills, one carding machine, one cloth-dressing mill, one tannery, four shipyards, six blacksmith shops, and several mechanic shops.
  • Harrington developed a considerable trade in lumber, and by 1859 contained two sawmills, three shingle mills and two lath mills.
  • The Julius Neils Lumber Company opened a 30 mft sawmill, planing mill, and 8 mft lath mill in May 1900, operating until 1923.
  • By 1923 Sheldon's industry included the lath mill, a creamery supplied by local farmers, and a factory that made hoops for butter tubs from local ash wood.
  • It occurs as clear, white to gray, blocky to lath shaped grains in common mafic igneous rocks such as basalt and gabbro, as well as in anorthosites.
  • Also added were a lath mill, a planing mill, a shingle mill, and a box factory that made piano crates, Cream of Wheat boxes, ammunition boxes, etc.
  • It has nevertheless retained much of its original character, including the original pitch pine and oak beams and lath and plaster ceiling, slate floors and inglenook fireplace with inset cast iron double oven.
  • A wide variety of stucco accessories, such as weep screeds, control and expansion joints, corner-aids and architectural reveals are sometimes also incorporated into the lath.
  • The building is in a deteriorating state - as of 2015 the glass has been removed from the verandas for safety, slates have slipped from the roof and the plaster on lath ceiling has collapsed in one upstairs room visible through a window.
  • In Canada and the United States, wood lath and plaster remained in use until the process was replaced by transitional methods followed by drywall (the North American term for plasterboard) in the mid-twentieth century.
  • Sears also offered a plasterboard product similar to modern drywall (under the name Goodwall) as an alternative to the plaster and lath wall-building techniques which required skilled carpenters and plasterers.
  • The technique was developed in England from the late 1400s to early 1500s, developing out of methods such as wattle and daub and lath and plaster construction, with the bricks being laid in horizontal courses or a herringbone pattern.
  • Several types of nails were made, including lath nails, slate nails, thatching nails and sparrowbills.
  • The coffered ceiling (an addition from 1882 replacing the original lath and plaster ceiling), the low-backed pews (from shortly after) and the predominantly classical memorials all contribute to the present interior retaining the character of a Georgian church.
  • thumbA lath or slat is a thin, narrow strip of straight-grained wood used under roof shingles or tiles, on lath and plaster walls and ceilings to hold plaster, and in lattice and trellis work.
  • This reworking was necessary to provide a tight-fitting roof over typically open shingle lath or sheathing boards.
  • Roofing battens or battening, also called roofing lath, are used to provide the fixing point for roofing materials such as shingles or tiles.
  • The origin of the furring strip may be from the root "furr", which is the term given to the space behind the field of lath.


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