blanketing

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English

Etymology

By surface analysis, blanket +‎ -ing.

Pronunciation

Noun

blanketing (countable and uncountable, plural blanketings)

  1. (uncountable, countable) Cloth for making blankets.
    • 1690, uncredited translator, The History of Scotland by George Buchanan, London: Awnsham Churchil, Book I, p. 23,
      But, now-a-days, many of them wear their Apparel of a dark brown colour, almost like Heath, that so, lying in the Heath-bushes, they might not, in the day-time, be discovered by their Cloaths. Being rather loosly happ’d, than closely covered, with this sort of Blanketing, they endure the fiercest weather
    • 1882, W. S. Gilbert, Iolanthe, London: Chappell, act II, page 30:
      Then the blanketing tickles—you feel like mixed pickles—so terribly sharp is the pricking,
      And you’re hot, and you’re cross, and you tumble and toss till there’s nothing ’twixt you and the ticking.
    • 1908, Henry de Vere Stacpoole, The Blue Lagoon, London: T. Fisher Unwin, Book 2, Part 1, Chapter 4, pp. 197-198:
      Then Dick lay down in the dried ferns and covered himself with a piece of the striped flannel which they used for blanketing []
    • 1922, E. O. Mousley, The Secrets of a Kuttite, London: John Lane, Part 2, Chapter 8, p. 192:
      Along the face of these limestone bluffs one observed a queer phenomenon of splashed yellow rocks, seemingly spilled from some gigantic cauldron, dried and hung out like blanketings in the morning sun.
  2. (countable) A layer of something that covers like a blanket.
    blanketings of snow
    • 1914, Saki, chapter 4, in When William Came, London: John Lane, page 64:
      Did one want grilled mushrooms, English fashion, they were there, black and moist and sizzling, and extremely edible; did one desire mushrooms à la Russe, they appeared, blanched and cool and toothsome under their white blanketing of sauce.
    • 1922 October 26, Virginia Woolf, chapter 3, in Jacob’s Room, Richmond, London: Leonard & Virginia Woolf at the Hogarth Press, →OCLC; republished London: The Hogarth Press, 1960, →OCLC, page 43:
      The stream made loops of water round their ankles. But none of that could show clearly through the swaddlings and blanketings of the Cambridge night.
  3. (uncountable, countable) The act or punishment of tossing in a blanket.
  4. (nautical, slang) A maneuver in which one vessel covers or becalms another with its sails.[1]
    • 1894, Edward Sullivan et al., Yachting, London: Longmans, Green, Volume I, Chapter , p. 144:
      The latter hailed for water, and was so much more nimble in coming round, that she managed to get on ‘Gwendolin’s’ weather before she had gathered way, and gave her such a complete blanketing as left her almost in irons.
  5. (rail transport) The provision of a layer under the trackbed to prevent clay subsoil and water being forced to the surface by the weight of trains.
    • 1962 July, “Talking of Trains: Big E.R. track blanketing job”, in Modern Railways, page 6:
      The track blanketing required excavation of up and down main lines to a depth of 4½ft below rail level for 1⅜ miles, to allow the defective track bed to be removed and replaced by a new formation. [...] a layer of polythene was employed by the E.R. at the base of the new formation; [...] On top of the polythene is laid the sand, as a blanketing and drainage medium, and above that the ballast.

Verb

blanketing

  1. present participle and gerund of blanket

References

  1. ^ Frances E. Slaughter, The Sportswoman’s Library, Westminster: Archibald Constrable, 1898, Volume 2, Appendix A.