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noun:- Timber sawed into panels, planks, or any other architectural members of standard or certain length.
- some thing useless or difficult.
- Chiefly British Miscellaneous accumulated articles.
- Wood meant as a building product.
- worthless items that are stored away
- A pawnbroker's store, or room for saving articles added pawn; thus, a pledge, or pawn.
- Old or decline household stuff; things cumbrous, or bulky and useless, or of little value.
- wood sawed or put into the form of beams, joists, panels, planks, staves, hoops, etc.; esp., whatever is smaller compared to heavy timber.
- Things, almost bulky and difficult, thrown apart (or which can be tossed apart) since no present usage or price.
- wood sawed or separated to be used, as beams, joists, boards, planks, staves, hoops, and stuff like that.
- ineffective and difficult fat, bulk, etc.
- Foolish or ribald talk.
- damage; mischief.
- A pawnbroker's store.
- A pledge; a pawn.
- an implement utilized in baseball by the batter
- the timber of trees slashed and prepared for use as building product
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verb-transitive:- To cut-down (woods) and prepare as marketable wood.
- To reduce the timber of.
- Chiefly British To clutter with or just as if with unused articles.
- To heap together in disorder.
- To fill or encumber with lumber.
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verb-intransitive:- To cut and prepare timber for advertising.
- To walk or move with hefty clumsiness. See Synonyms at blunder.
- to maneuver with a rumbling sound.
- to go greatly, just as if strained.
- which will make an audio as though moving heavily or clumsily; to rumble.
- To cut logs in the forest, or prepare timber for market.
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verb:- to weight straight down with things, to fill, to encumber
- slice lumber, like in woods and forests
- move heavily or clumsily
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others:- To make huge rumbling sound; rumble: chiefly in the present participle.
- to go greatly or cumbrously: chiefly in the present participle.
- To stumble. Also lumper.
- To heap together in disorder.
- To fill with lumber; encumber with anything ineffective: because, to lumber an area: usually with up.
- To reduce timber when you look at the woodland and prepare it for market.
- To put in pawn; ergo, to put in jail.
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Related Sources
- Definition for "lumber"
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- Synonym for "lumber"
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- Rhyme for "lumber"
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