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wattle and daub
noun
- Also wattle and dab. a building technique employing wattles plastered with clay and mud.
- a form of wall construction consisting of upright posts or stakes interwoven with twigs or tree branches and plastered with a mixture of clay and straw.
wattle and daub
noun
- a form of wall construction consisting of interwoven twigs plastered with a mixture of clay, lime, water, and sometimes dung and chopped straw
- ( as modifier )
a wattle-and-daub hut
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of wattle and daub1
First recorded in 1800–10
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
So many weeks we spent cutting trees, splitting clapboard, tying thatch, making wattle and daub.
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A computer that old may as well be made of wattle and daub.
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The house … had an earth floor and its end walls may have been finished with wattle and daub.
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The wattle and daub cottages nearly always got burned, and had to be rebuilt afterwards with much profanity.
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Once used in masonry as wattle and daub, where panels of woven branches were daubed with mud or dung, wattle work is still useful to a gardener setting out to build a fence.
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