fluting
English
Noun
fluting (plural flutings)
- (architecture, sculpture) A decoration consisting of parallel, normally vertical, flutes (grooves) incised into the surface.
- 1920, Frank Cousins, Phil M. Riley, The Colonial Architecture of Philadelphia[1], Boston: Little, Brown, and Company:
- Flutings also adorn the short architraves each side of the fanlight, and the abacus of the pilaster columns which is carried across a supplementary lintel in front of the lintel proper, the latter being several inches to the rear because of the deeply recessed arrangement of the door.
- The act of making such grooves.
- A flute-like sound.
- (fashion) A fluted pleat; a small, rounded or pressed pleat used as trimming on a garment.
- The erosional process by which a well-jointed coarse-grained rock, such as granite or gneiss, surface develops a set of flutes.
Translations
decoration
act
Adjective
fluting (not comparable)
- Making a sound like a flute.
Verb
fluting
- present participle and gerund of flute