thatcher's rake
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]thatcher's rake (plural thatcher's rakes)
- Synonym of thatch-rake (“tool for combing a thatched roof”)
- 1916, Charles Frederick Innocent, The Development of English Building Construction, page 205:
- After the thatch is secured on the roof, it is usual in England to make the surface flat and even by beating and combing. This is generally done with a thatcher's rake.
- 2007, Basil Oliver, The Cottages of England: Country Homes from the 16th to 18th Century, →ISBN:
- After being thus secured the surface was beaten flat and, in the case of straw thatch was combed down with a thatcher's rake.
- 2013, Ross King, Ex Libris, →ISBN:
- He exposed a row of teeth that were sharp and gapped like a thatcher's rake.
- Synonym of thatch-rake (“heraldic device”)
- 1847, Henry Gough, A Glossary of Terms Used in British Heraldry:
- Argent, three thatchers' rakes barwise sable, are the arms of ZAKESLEY.
- 1874, John Woody Papworth, Alfred W. Morant, An Alphabetical Dictionary of Coats of Arms Belonging to Families in Great Britain and Ireland, Forming an Extensive Ordinary of British Armorials:
- Sa. three thatcher's rakes in pale arg. SHUNE, Kent
- 1894, James Parker, A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry, page 488:
- The thatch-rake or thatcher's rake is drawn as in the margin ; but it is liable to be confused with the wool-comb and thatch-hook.