| 释义 |
chamfer /ˈtʃamfə /verb [with object](In carpentry) cut away (a right-angled edge or corner) to make a symmetrical sloping edge: (as adjective chamfered) a neat chamfered edge...- The front corners are more chamfered, the headlights cut into the bumper, flanking a lower front grille.
- The straight marlborough legs are chamfered on the inside corners to make them look less blocky and massive when viewed from an angle.
- The scribed outline on the back of the splat of this chair, set about one quarter of an inch from the edge, may have been a guide for chamfering the splat after it was sawn to shape.
nounA symmetrical sloping surface at an edge or corner.There are unfortunate chamfers on the back corners of the plan to allow for rights of light of neighbouring buildings....- The planks have to be drilled and riveted together side by side with a diagonal chamfer at their ends.
- Plus, surface tension is created without resorting to lines and chamfers.
Origin Mid 16th century (in the sense 'flute or furrow'): back-formation from chamfering, from French chamfrain, from chant 'edge' (see cant2) + fraint 'broken' (from Old French fraindre 'break', from Latin frangere). Rhymes camphor |