woodwork
English
Etymology
From Middle English woodewerk (“carpentry”), equivalent to wood + work.
Noun
woodwork (usually uncountable, plural woodworks)
- (countable) Something made from wood.
- (uncountable) Wood product.
- 2008 September 14, Bill Cunniff, “A stroll through OLD IRVING PARK”, in The Chicago Sun-Times:
- Some woodwork and the plaster ceiling medallions have been duplicated to match the originals.
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- (uncountable) Working with wood.
- He does woodwork as a hobby.
- 1906, Tasmania. Education Dept, The educational record, volume 1-6, page 14:
- The unthinking man assumes that if woodwork is to be taught, the best person to do it must be a carpenter
- Synonym: woodworking
- (only in plural, often in proper names) A workshop or factory devoted to making wood products.
- 1911, North Carolina Dept. of Conservation and Development, Economic papers, number 23-28, page 7:
- The woodworks now find utilization for almost every scrap. Pine stumps are changing into turpentine bottles.
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- A place of concealment or obscurity.
- Friends and relatives were coming out of the woodwork to celebrate his good fortune.
- So when he wants to, he can just kind of blend into the woodwork.
- (soccer) The frame of the goal, i.e. the goalpost or crossbar.
- That goal was so close, it went in off the woodwork.
- 2012 May 5, Phil McNulty, “Chelsea 2-1 Liverpool”, in BBC Sport:
- Carroll thought he had equalised with his header against the bar with eight minutes left. Liverpool claimed the ball had cross the line and Chelsea were grateful for a miraculous intervention from Cech to turn his effort on to the woodwork.
Derived terms
Translations
handiwork of wood
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wood product
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working with wood
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a woodworking shop or factory
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