trowel
English
Etymology
From Middle English trowell, trouel, truel, from Middle French truelle, from Late Latin truella, from Classical Latin trulla, the diminutive of trua (“ladle”). Doublet of trullo.
Pronunciation
Audio (US) (file) Audio (UK) (file) - IPA(key): /ˈtɹaʊ.əl/
- Rhymes: -aʊəl
Noun
trowel (plural trowels)
Translations
mason's tool
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scoop-like gardening tool
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Verb
trowel (third-person singular simple present trowels, present participle troweling or trowelling, simple past and past participle troweled or trowelled)
- (transitive) To apply (a substance) with a trowel.
- He troweled the coarse mix with a twist, leaving a pattern of arcs.
- (transitive) To pass over with a trowel.
- 1980, Robert M. Jones, editor, Walls and Ceilings, Time-Life Books, →ISBN, page 26:
- Most finish coats are troweled smooth, but sometimes you will have to add cosmetic touches to make the patch match the surrounding plaster, texturing the surface randomly or uniformly with any of a variety of tools, ranging from sponges to special trowels.
- (colloquial, figurative) To apply something heavily or unsubtly.
- 2014 July 1, Steve Rose, “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes: a primate scream - first look review”, in The Guardian:
- The whole Planet of the Apes set-up has been ripe for metaphor – from slavery and Afro-American revolution to European conquest of the Americas, even the war on terror. But mercifully, there's no big subtext being troweled on here.
Translations
Further reading
- trowel on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Trowel in the Encyclopædia Britannica (11th edition, 1911)
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