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lumber
1[luhm-ber]
noun
timber sawed or split into planks, boards, etc.
miscellaneous useless articles that are stored away.
verb (used without object)
to cut timber and prepare it for market.
to become useless or to be stored away as useless.
verb (used with object)
to convert (a specified amount, area, etc.) into lumber.
We lumbered more than a million acres last year.
to heap together in disorder.
to fill up or obstruct with miscellaneous useless articles; encumber.
lumber
1/ ˈlʌmbə /
noun
logs; sawn timber
cut timber, esp when sawn and dressed ready for use in joinery, carpentry, etc
( as modifier )
the lumber trade
useless household articles that are stored away
( as modifier )
lumber room
verb
(tr) to pile together in a disorderly manner
(tr) to fill up or encumber with useless household articles
to convert (the trees) of (a forest) into marketable timber
informal, (tr) to burden with something unpleasant, tedious, etc
(tr) to arrest; imprison
lumber
2/ ˈlʌmbə /
verb
to move awkwardly
an obsolete word for rumble
Other Word Forms
- lumberer noun
- lumberless adjective
- lumberly adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of lumber1
Origin of lumber2
Word History and Origins
Origin of lumber1
Origin of lumber2
Example Sentences
According to the joint agreement, the US will apply the new 15% tariff rate on most European goods, including European semiconductor and lumber exports, from 1 September.
Construction workers are still hauling lumber and nails, and DIY homeowners pushing carts of paint and soil.
State biologists set up a trap and the bear soon lumbered into it.
Pollmeier in Germany, for example, has BauBuche – a laminated veneer lumber, very thin layers of wood pressed and glued together – made using beech.
The US buys about 69% of its lumber, 25% of its imported iron and steel, and 18% of its copper imports from Canada, a report by the Canadian Chamber of Commerce has suggested.
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