glazing
玻璃裝配業,玻璃窗,上光,上釉
Glaze v. t. [imp. & p. p. Glazed p. pr. & vb. n. Glazing.]
1. To furnish (a window, a house, a sash, a case, etc.) with glass.
Two cabinets daintily paved, richly handed, and glazed with crystalline glass. --Bacon.
2. To incrust, cover, or overlay with a thin surface, consisting of, or resembling, glass; as, to glaze earthenware; hence, to render smooth, glasslike, or glossy; as, to glaze paper, gunpowder, and the like.
Sorrow's eye glazed with blinding tears. --Shak.
3. Paint. To apply thinly a transparent or semitransparent color to (another color), to modify the effect.
Glaz·ing n.
1. The act or art of setting glass; the art of covering with a vitreous or glasslike substance, or of polishing or rendering glossy.
2. The glass set, or to be set, in a sash, frame. etc.
3. The glass, glasslike, or glossy substance with which any surface is incrusted or overlaid; as, the glazing of pottery or porcelain, or of paper.
4. Paint. Transparent, or semitransparent, colors passed thinly over other colors, to modify the effect.
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