dry-stone wall dry-stone walls in AM, use dry wall A dry-stone wall is a wall that has been built by fitting stones together without using any cement. in Britain, a wall built with pieces of stone that are fitted closely together without using cement to hold them in place
Also know as gypsum board or sheetrock, these large sheets are attached to the wall studs and ceiling framing to construct the walls and ceilings of the home
Sheetrock (gypsum board) that covers the framing and taping, coating, and finishing to make the interior walls and ceilings of a building Drywall is also used as a verb to refer to installation process
Gypsum wallboard, often referred to by the brand name "Sheetrock" and sometimes mistakenly called "plasterboard," so named because it allows the builder to finish the wall surface without water, as required in previous plaster-and-lath wall finishing
Wall board or gypsum A panel (normally 4' X 8', 10', 12', or 16') made with a core of Gypsum (chalklike) rock, which covers interior walls and ceilings
Sheet material consisting of a uniform layer of gypsum sandwiched between facings of paper; used as an interior wall covering that can be painted or covered with decorative paper or paneling
Any substitute for plaster such as wallboard, plasterboard, gyproc or sheetrock Drywall typically consists of several thicknesses of fibre board or paper that have been bonded to a hardened core of gypsum
dry wall
التركية النطق
dray wôl
النطق
/ˈdrī ˈwôl/ /ˈdraɪ ˈwɔːl/
علم أصول الكلمات
[ 'drI ] (adjective.) before 12th century. Middle English, from Old English dryge; akin to Old High German truckan dry, Old English drEahnian to drain.