释义 |
parge, v.|pɑːdʒ| [? Shortened from parget v.] = parget v. 1.
1701in New Eng. Hist. & Gen. Reg. (1879) XXXIII. 176 note, To point the garret and to Parge the chimnyes with good Lime morter. 1703T. N. City & C. Purchaser 31 They do not Parge, or (which is all one) Plaster their Garrets. 1805R. W. Dickson Pract. Agric. I. 57 The thatch should be properly parged with lime-mortar on the inside, to prevent any dust falling upon the milk. 1908G. P. Bankart Art of Plasterer vi. 77 ‘Lambert's Farm’, in the parish of Great Tey, Essex, has a parged front. So parge-work = parget n. 2, pargeting 2. Hence ˈparge-worker. Also parge decoration, etc.
1649in Archæologia X. 403 Above which [waynscot] is a border of freet or parge worke wrought..the seeling is of the same fret or parge worke. 1906Essex Rev. XV. 162 The unique designs in parge-work on its front. 1908G. P. Bankart Art of Plasterer vi. 58 One form of parge decoration consisted of a simple type of incising, or cutting patterns through the top layer of plaster down to the coating underneath. Ibid. 79 The favourite spots of the parge-worker were over⁓mantels, gable ends, and lunettes, [etc]. 1940Chambers's Techn. Dict. 617/1 Parge-work (Build.), an ancient form of external plastering with a mixture similar to that used in pargetting..chimneys. 1951Lambert & Marx Eng. Popular Art iii. 48 This ‘parge work’ ornament was very popular in the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. At Ipswich there are numerous examples of external parge decorations from about 1557. |