Planking


[plang-king] /ˈplæŋ kɪŋ/

noun
1.
collectively, as in a floor.
2.
the act of laying or covering with .
[plangk] /plæŋk/
noun
1.
a long, flat piece of timber, thicker than a board.
2.
lumber in such pieces; .
3.
something to stand on or to cling to for support.
4.
any one of the stated principles or objectives comprising the political platform of a party campaigning for election:
They fought for a plank supporting a nuclear freeze.
verb (used with object)
5.
to lay, cover, or furnish with planks.
6.
to bake or broil and serve (steak, fish, chicken, etc.) on a wooden board.
7.
(def 2).
Idioms
8.
walk the plank,

/ˈplæŋkɪŋ/
noun
1.
a number of planks
2.
the act of covering or furnishing with planks
/plæŋk/
noun
1.
a stout length of sawn timber
2.
something that supports or sustains
3.
one of the policies in a political party’s programme
4.
walk the plank, to be forced by pirates to walk to one’s death off the end of a plank jutting out over the water from the side of a ship
5.
(Brit, slang) a stupid person; idiot
verb (transitive)
6.
to cover or provide (an area) with planks
7.
to beat (meat) to make it tender
8.
(mainly US & Canadian) to cook or serve (meat or fish) on a special wooden board
/plæŋk/
verb
1.
(transitive) (Scot) to hide; cache
n.

late 13c. (c.1200 as a surname), from Old North French planke, variant of Old French planche “plank, slab, little wooden bridge” (12c.), from Late Latin planca “broad slab, board,” probably from Latin plancus “flat, flat-footed,” from PIE *plak- (1) “to be flat” (see placenta). Technically, timber sawed to measure 2 to 6 inches thick, 9 inches or more wide, and 8 feet or more long. Political sense of “item of a party platform” is U.S. coinage from 1848. To walk the plank, supposedly a pirate punishment, is first attested 1789 and most early references are to slave-traders disposing of excess human cargo in crossing the ocean.

verb

To do the sex act with or to; screw: had witless good fun with his children while his wife was out getting planked

[1970s+; origin unknown]

Related Terms

walk the plank
see: walk the plank

Read Also:

  • Plank-sheer

    noun 1. (nautical) a plank or timber covering the upper ends of the frames of a wooden vessel

  • Plankter

    [plangk-ter] /ˈplæŋk tər/ noun 1. any organism that is an element of plankton.

  • Plankton

    [plangk-tuh n] /ˈplæŋk tən/ noun 1. the aggregate of passively floating, drifting, or somewhat motile organisms occurring in a body of water, primarily comprising microscopic algae and protozoa. /ˈplæŋktən/ noun 1. the organisms inhabiting the surface layer of a sea or lake, consisting of small drifting plants and animals, such as diatoms Compare nekton n. […]

  • Planktonic

    [plangk-tuh n] /ˈplæŋk tən/ noun 1. the aggregate of passively floating, drifting, or somewhat motile organisms occurring in a body of water, primarily comprising microscopic algae and protozoa. /ˈplæŋktən/ noun 1. the organisms inhabiting the surface layer of a sea or lake, consisting of small drifting plants and animals, such as diatoms Compare nekton n. […]

  • Planless

    [plan] /plæn/ noun 1. a scheme or method of acting, doing, proceeding, making, etc., developed in advance: battle plans. 2. a design or scheme of arrangement: an elaborate plan for seating guests. 3. a specific project or definite purpose: plans for the future. 4. Also called plan view. a drawing made to scale to represent […]


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