tile









tile


noun

  1. a thin slab or bent piece of baked clay, sometimes painted or glazed, used for various purposes, as to form one of the units of a roof covering, floor, or revetment.
  2. any of various similar slabs or pieces, as of linoleum, stone, rubber, or metal.
  3. tiles collectively.
  4. a pottery tube or pipe used for draining land.
  5. Also called hollow tile. any of various hollow or cellular units of burnt clay or other materials, as gypsum or cinder concrete, for building walls, partitions, floors, and roofs, or for fireproofing steelwork or the like.
  6. Informal. a stiff hat or high silk hat.

verb (used with object), tiled, til·ing.

  1. to cover with or as with tiles.

noun

  1. a flat thin slab of fired clay, rubber, linoleum, etc, usually square or rectangular and sometimes ornamental, used with others to cover a roof, floor, wall, etcRelated adjective: tegular
  2. a short pipe made of earthenware, concrete, or plastic, used with others to form a drain
  3. tiles collectively
  4. a rectangular block used as a playing piece in mah jong and other games
  5. British old-fashioned, slang a hat
  6. on the tiles informal on a spree, esp of drinking or debauchery

verb

  1. (tr) to cover with tiles

n.Old English tigele “roofing shingle,” from West Germanic *tegala (cf. Old High German ziagal, German ziegel, Dutch tegel, Old Norse tigl), a borrowing from Latin tegula “tile” (cf. Italian tegola, French tuile), from tegere “roof, to cover” (see stegosaurus). Also used in Old English and early Middle English for “brick,” before that word came into use. The verb meaning “to cover with tiles” is recorded from late 14c.

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