washboarding

English

Verb

washboarding

  1. present participle of washboard

Noun

washboarding (usually uncountable, plural washboardings)

  1. The appearance of ripples or bumps on a dirt or gravel road, caused by wear from traffic, erosion, or poor grading.
    • 1988, Deborah J. Taylor, National Central Tire Inflation Program:
      According to the road crew, two forms of road surface damage are common to this haul route — washboarding and potholing.
    • 1990, Harold W. Muncy, Asphalt Emulsions - Issue 1079, →ISBN, page 67:
      As the surface aged with traffic, the washboarding decreased in severity.
    • 1997, Better Roads - Volume 67, page 33:
      Aggregate quality is important to prevent washboarding.
    • 2005, T.F. Fwa, The Handbook of Highway Engineering, →ISBN, page 16-17:
      Corrugations (washboardings) are fairly regular evenly spaced transverse ridges and caused by traffic actions in conjunction with loose aggregate.
  2. A streaky appearance on solid patches of color printed on corrugated materials, resulting from the uneven pressure exerted due to corrugations.
    • 1987, Paper Technology and Industry - Volumes 28-29, page 267:
      When postprinting, washboarding influences the printability. Washboarding depends mainly on the distance between the flute tips ...
    • 2005, Tappi Journal - Volume 4, page 7:
      The flute tips and the buckling or washboarding between the flutes tips can be seen easily.
    • 2008, Appita Journal:
      Washboarding is a result of a waviness of the liner structure that follows the flutes of the comigated medium.
  3. (bees) An unexplained behavior in which bees move across the surface of their hive with a rocking motion.
    • 2010, Malcolm T. Sanford & ‎Richard E. Bonney, Storey's Guide to Keeping Honey Bees, →ISBN, page 64:
      The behavior shown here is washboarding.
    • 2013, Barry Werth, (Please provide the book title or journal name), →ISBN, page 322:
      He then ran the images back in slow motion. They resembled the “washboarding” of bees, a herringboning, a shimmy.
    • 2015, James E. Tew, The Beekeeper's Problem Solver, →ISBN, page 72:
      Certainly, interior surfaces and some exterior surfaces are coated with propolis, but washboarding behavior is not necessarily associated with propolis application.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.