etching









etching


etching [ech-ing] ExamplesWord Origin See more synonyms for etching on Thesaurus.com noun

  1. the act or process of making designs or pictures on a metal plate, glass, etc., by the corrosive action of an acid instead of by a burin.
  2. an impression, as on paper, taken from an etched plate.
  3. the design so produced.
  4. a metal plate bearing such a design.

Origin of etching First recorded in 1625–35; etch + -ing1 etch [ech] verb (used with object)

  1. to cut, bite, or corrode with an acid or the like; engrave with an acid or the like, as to form a design in furrows that when charged with ink will give an impression on paper.
  2. to produce (a design, image, etc.) by this method, as on copper or glass.
  3. to outline clearly or sharply; delineate, as a person’s features or character.
  4. to fix permanently in or implant firmly on the mind; root in the memory: Our last conversation is etched in my memory.
  5. Geology. to cut (a feature) into the surface of the earth by means of erosion: A deep canyon was etched into the land by the river’s rushing waters.

verb (used without object)

  1. to practice the art of etching.

noun

  1. Printing. an acid used for etching.

Origin of etch 1625–35; Dutch etsen German ätzen to etch, orig. cause to eat; cognate with Old English ettan to graze; akin to eat Related formsetch·er, nounun·etched, adjective Related Words for etching engraving, inscription, reproduction, impression, imprint, print, transferring, mezzotint, photoengraving, rotogravure, photogravure Examples from the Web for etching Contemporary Examples of etching

  • He had customized his new gun by etching in the words “better off this way” and “my ELF weapon.”

    Inside the Washington Navy Yard’s Building 197 During Alexis’s Rampage

    Michael Daly

    September 19, 2013

  • Celluloid is to Dean what oil paint is to Titian or etching to Whistler.

    Tacita Dean: One of Today’s 10 Most Important Artists

    Blake Gopnik

    June 5, 2011

  • The Pablo Picasso etching had stalled at a bid of $5,400, barely above its low estimate.

    Bernie’s Fire Sale

    Brett Sokol

    May 23, 2009

  • That day, I walked by the Vietnam Memorial and people were etching names on to front pages of newspapers.

    Let’s Not Have a Ball

    Wendy Button

    December 9, 2008

  • Historical Examples of etching

  • To his request I consented, made an etching of it, and it was published.

    Bygone Punishments

    William Andrews

  • His most finished and striking landscape is perhaps the etching of the “Three Trees.”

    Rembrandt and His Works

    John Burnet

  • Tall 16mo, handsome cover design, etching frontispiece, $1.00.

    Margaret Montfort

    Laura E. Richards

  • Handsomely illustrated with a series of portraits in etching and photogravure.

    Margaret Montfort

    Laura E. Richards

  • In truth, there are no secrets to this artist’s technique in the etching medium.

    Rembrandt’s Etching Technique: An Example

    Peter Morse

  • British Dictionary definitions for etching etching noun

    1. the art, act, or process of preparing etched surfaces or of printing designs from them
    2. an etched plate
    3. an impression made from an etched plate

    etch verb

    1. (tr) to wear away the surface of (a metal, glass, etc) by chemical action, esp the action of an acid
    2. to cut or corrode (a design, decoration, etc) on (a metal or other plate to be used for printing) by using the action of acid on parts not covered by wax or other acid-resistant coating
    3. (tr) to cut with or as if with a sharp implementhe etched his name on the table
    4. (tr; usually passive) to imprint vividlythe event was etched on her memory

    Derived Formsetcher, nounWord Origin for etch C17: from Dutch etsen, from Old High German azzen to feed, bite Word Origin and History for etching n.

    1630s, action of the verb etch, also “the art of engraving;” 1760s as “a print, etc., made from an etched plate.”

    etch v.

    1630s, “to engrave by eating away the surface of with acids,” from Dutch etsen, from German ätzen “to etch,” from Old High German azzon “cause to bite, feed,” from Proto-Germanic *atjanan, causative of *etanan “eat” (see eat). Related: Etched; etching.

    etching in Culture etching

    An artistic print made from a plate on which the artist has etched a design with acid. (Compare engraving.)

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