incise

listen to the pronunciation of incise
English - Turkish
English - English
To cut in or into with a sharp instrument; to carve; to engrave
make an incision into by carving or cutting
{f} cut; carve; engrave
To cut, gash, or wound with a sharp instrument; to cut off
If an object is incised with a design, the design is carefully cut into the surface of the object with a sharp instrument. After the surface is polished, a design is incised or painted. a set of chairs incised with Grecian scrolls. to cut a pattern, word etc into something, using a sharp instrument (inciser, from incisus, past participle of incidere )
incised
A decoration found on pottery consisting of lines drawn into wet clay When fired, the arrangement of lines leaves a permanent design on the vessel surface
incised
meander in a river, a deep steep-sided meander (bend) formed by the severe downwards erosion of an existing meander There are several incised meanders along the middle course ot the river Wye, near Chepstow, Gwent
incised
Sharply impressed into the body, as a trademark or form number on the base of a stein Base markings were normally applied by impressing a metal die into the clay while it was still in the "green" state
incised
cut rather deeply (leaf margin)
incised
cut into with a sharp instrument sharply and deeply indented
incised
- refers to the lines in unfired ceramic material that were created by using a stamp, press, or mold; sometimes used synonymously with etched
incised
Deeply cut, engraved or carved, the entire ornament being cut into the surface rather than raised from it Contrast Relief Sometimes called Intaglio
incised
{s} cut; carved; formed by cutting
incised
a (L in, into; caedere, to cut) with sharp angles between the lobes; having deeply cleft margins
incised
Having deep and sharp notches, as a leaf or a petal
incised
lines [n] shallow decorative lines cut into a wood surface
incised
Cut in; carved; engraved
incised
cut into with a sharp instrument
incised
Sharply and irregularly slashed or cut
incised
A term used to describe down-cutting (downward erosion) by a stream Incision deepens and often steepens the stream channel
incised
past of incise
incised
sharply and deeply indented
incised
indented into - some dolls marking are incised rather than raised or elevated
incised
Deep, well defined channel with narrow width to depth ration, and limited or no lateral movement Often newly formed, and as a result of rapid down-cutting in the substrate
incised
cut or impressed into a surface; "an incised design"; "engraved invitations"
incised
In treated lumber this refers to the knife perforations in the lumber These aid in helping the chemical penetrate deeper into the lumber
incises
third-person singular of incise
incising
present participle of incise
incising
Cutting into a surface with a sharp instrument
incising
or cutting designs into the clay with a sharp tool or a fine wire loop is usually a lineal type of decoration INLAY or "Mishima" - is the continuation of the above process After the incisions are cut into the clay they are filled with a thick slip of a contrasting colored clay When partially dried, the excess is scraped off flush with the surface
incising
literally 'cutting': any surface carving with gouge, v tool etc If a carving is just incised, it would not have involved grounding out
incising
Scratching lines into a surface
incise
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