scarfing
English
Verb
scarfing
- present participle and gerund of scarf
Noun
scarfing (plural scarfings)
- Material for making scarves.
- 1896, The Clothier and Furnisher, volume 26, page 53:
- The Ascot scarfs may be arranged in regularity as shown, or they may each be displayed differently so as to bring out the colorings and designs in the scarfings.
- A scarf joint.
- 1884, Stephen Bleecker Luce, Aaron Ward, Text-book of Seamanship, page 79:
- The scarfings of the piece must be kept clear of each other (that is, the points of junction in one piece must be as far as possible from those in another piece), and equally distributed in the mast.
- (rare) A scarf; a covering.
- 1856 November 29, “Fine Arts: The Turners at Marlborough House”, in The Athenæum […], number 1518, London: […] James Holmes, […] J[ohn] Francis. […], →ISSN, →OCLC, page 1469, column 3:
- High on the deck, under the cream-coloured sail and the flutter of pink scarfings and flags, stands Ulysses waving a defiant torch at Polyphemus, who, colossal through mist, claws at his wound, himself tall as a pyramid and vast as an Alp.
- 1923, J[oseph] C[harles] Mardrus (French translation), translated by E[dward] Powys Mathers, “The Tale of Zumurrud, the Beautiful, and Ali Shar, Son of Glory”, in The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night […], London: […] The Casanova Society, →OCLC, 321st night, page 165:
- As no one answered him, he got to his feet and anxiously entered the other room, which he found silent and empty, with the veils and scarfings of Zumurrud scattered upon the floor.
- [original: Mais personne ne lui répondit. Il se leva anxieux et entra dans l’appartement, qu’il trouva vide et silencieux, et où les voiles de Zoumourroud et ses écharpes gisaient sur le sol.]
- 2012, Jonathan Grant [pseudonym; John Grant], chapter 16, in Bring Flowers of the Fairest (Mehala; 4), [Swanmore, Hampshire]: Jellyfish Publishing Solutions, →ISBN, page 141:
- He asked her to remove her scarfing, her neck-a-tee and her mauve pelerine.