In-and-out bond
noun, Masonry.
1.
a stonework or brickwork bond having headers and stretchers alternating vertically.
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[in-uh nd-ou-ter, -uh n-] /ˈɪn əndˈaʊ tər, -ən-/ noun 1. a person who is by turns in and out of a particular situation, condition, venture, investment, etc. noun An erratic performer: 30 knockouts among his 52 victories, but he has been an in-and-outer (1905+)
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[ih-neyn] /ɪˈneɪn/ adjective 1. lacking sense, significance, or ideas; silly: inane questions. 2. empty; void. noun 3. something that is empty or void, especially the void of infinite space. /ɪˈneɪn/ adjective 1. senseless, unimaginative, or empty; unintelligent: inane remarks adj. “silly, empty-headed,” 1819, earlier “empty” (1660s), a back-formation from inanity. Related: Inanely.
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[ih-neyn] /ɪˈneɪn/ adjective 1. lacking sense, significance, or ideas; silly: inane questions. 2. empty; void. noun 3. something that is empty or void, especially the void of infinite space. /ɪˈneɪn/ adjective 1. senseless, unimaginative, or empty; unintelligent: inane remarks adj. “silly, empty-headed,” 1819, earlier “empty” (1660s), a back-formation from inanity. Related: Inanely.
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[ih-neyn] /ɪˈneɪn/ adjective 1. lacking sense, significance, or ideas; silly: inane questions. 2. empty; void. noun 3. something that is empty or void, especially the void of infinite space. /ɪˈneɪn/ adjective 1. senseless, unimaginative, or empty; unintelligent: inane remarks adj. “silly, empty-headed,” 1819, earlier “empty” (1660s), a back-formation from inanity. Related: Inanely.
- Inanga
/ˈiːnʌŋə/ noun 1. another name for the New Zealand whitebait (sense 2) 2. a common type of New Zealand grass tree, Dracophyllum longifolium