What is the name meaning of SCAFF. Phrases containing SCAFF
See name meanings and uses of SCAFF!SCAFF
SCAFF
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Warwick.English : metonymic occupational name for a maker of warrocks, wedges of timber that were used to tighten the joints in a scaffold.
Boy/Male
British, English
From the Crooked Field
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained; possibly a variant of Scaife.Dutch (Belgium) : from German schaf, hence a metonymic occupational name for a shepherd or a nickname for someone thought to resemble a sheep in some way.
SCAFF
SCAFF
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Whiten; Peace
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a whitewasher, Middle English limer, lymer, an agent derivative of Old English līm ‘lime’.
Boy/Male
German, Traditional
Fearless
Girl/Female
Australian, Japanese
Child of Taka
Boy/Male
Hindu
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Love Within
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sanskrit, Telugu
Happy
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim, Pakistani, Urdu
Child of God
Girl/Female
Muslim
Brilliant, Beautiful
Boy/Male
Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu
Lord of the Desert
SCAFF
SCAFF
SCAFF
SCAFF
SCAFF
n.
A movable frame or support for anything, as scaffolding, consisting of three or four legs secured to a top piece, and forming a sort of stool or horse, used by carpenters, masons, and other workmen; also, a kind of framework of strong posts or piles, and crossbeams, for supporting a bridge, the track of a railway, or the like.
n.
A loft or scaffold for hay.
n.
A fir pole of from four to seven inches diameter, and twenty to forty feet long, sometimes roughly hewn, used for scaffoldings, and sometimes for slight and common roofs, for which use it is split.
v. i.
To roll down; to fall suddenly and violently; to be precipitated; as, to tumble from a scaffold.
n.
A scaffold; a supporting framework; as, the scaffolding of the body.
n.
A horizontal piece of timber secured to the uprights and supporting floor timbers, a staircase, scaffolding, or the like. It differs from an intertie in being intended to carry weight.
n.
One of the short pieces of timber on which the planks forming the floor of a scaffold are laid, -- one end resting on the ledger of the scaffold, and the other in a hole left in the wall temporarily for the purpose.
n.
A floor elevated for the convenience of mechanical work, or the like; a scaffold; a staging.
n.
Specifically, a stage or elevated platform for the execution of a criminal; as, to die on the scaffold.
v. t.
To furnish or uphold with a scaffold.
n.
A viaduct, pier, scaffold, or the like, resting on trestles connected together.
n.
A scaffolding or frame carrying a crane or other structure.
n.
An accumulation of adherent, partly fused material forming a shelf, or dome-shaped obstruction, above the tuyeres in a blast furnace.
n.
To get up on anything, as a platform or scaffold; especially, to seat one's self on a horse for riding.
n.
An upright support, as one of the poles of a scaffold; any upright in framing.
n.
A suspended scaffold used in shafts.
n.
A pole for supporting a scaffold.
n.
A temporary structure of timber, boards, etc., for various purposes, as for supporting workmen and materials in building, for exhibiting a spectacle upon, for holding the spectators at a show, etc.
n.
Materials for building scaffolds.
n.
A scaffold.