Sills









Sills


Sills [silz] Examples noun

  1. BeverlyBelle SilvermanBubbles, 1929–2007, U.S. coloratura soprano and opera administrator.

sill [sil] noun

  1. a horizontal timber, block, or the like serving as a foundation of a wall, house, etc.
  2. the horizontal piece or member beneath a window, door, or other opening.
  3. Geology. a tabular body of intrusive igneous rock, ordinarily between beds of sedimentary rocks or layers of volcanic ejecta.

Origin of sill before 900; Middle English sille, Old English syl, sylle; cognate with Low German süll, Old Norse syll; akin to German Schwelle sillRelated formssill-like, adjectiveun·der·sill, noun Sill [sil] noun

  1. Mount, a mountain in E central California, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. 14,153 feet (4314 meters).

Related Words for sills rim, ridge, berm, sill, girder, scaffolding, joist, shaft, pillar, pole, plank, timber, brink, verge, bar, reef, mantle, track, route Examples from the Web for sills Historical Examples of sills

  • Some of the people had edged to the walls as if to listen, and a few had clambered to the sills as if to see.

    The Manxman

    Hall Caine

  • Indeed, a legend runs that these sills were not laid by men at all, but by the Dwarfs.

    Dwellers in the Hills

    Melville Davisson Post

  • It is used at the corners of sills and plates, also sometimes in chair-seats.

    Handwork in Wood

    William Noyes

  • On those were laid the sills, and before noon the building was up and half covered.

    Field and Forest

    Oliver Optic

  • The only external alteration he had made had been the lowering of the sills of the windows.

    The Wonder

    J. D. Beresford

  • British Dictionary definitions for sills Sills noun

    1. Beverley, original name Belle Silverman. 1929–2007, US soprano: director of the New York City Opera (1979–89)

    sill noun

    1. a shelf at the bottom of a window inside a room
    2. a horizontal piece along the outside lower member of a window, that throws water clear of the wall below
    3. the lower horizontal member of a window or door frame
    4. a continuous horizontal member placed on top of a foundation wall in order to carry a timber framework
    5. a flat usually horizontal mass of igneous rock, situated between two layers of older sedimentary rock, that was formed by an intrusion of magma

    Word Origin for sill Old English syll; related to Old Norse svill sill, Icelandic svoli tree trunk, Old High German swella sill, Latin solum ground Word Origin and History for sills sill n.

    Old English syll “beam, threshold, large timber serving as a foundation of a wall,” from Proto-Germanic *suljo (cf. Old Norse svill, Swedish syll, Danish syld “framework of a building,” Middle Low German sull, Old High German swelli, German Schwelle “sill”), perhaps from PIE root *swel- (3) “post, board” (cf. Greek selma “beam”). Meaning “lower horizontal part of a window opening” is recorded from early 15c.

    sills in Science sill [sĭl]

    1. A sheet of igneous rock intruded between layers of older rock. See illustration at batholith.
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