Crossword clues for replaster
Wiktionary
vb. (context transitive English) To plaster (a wall, ceiling, etc.) again.
Usage examples of "replaster".
She went away to telephone the houseman, told Staff to get the cutters and shears ready and everything needed to replaster the limb, and glanced at the clock.
Walls had been stripped and replastered but not painted, except for a basic undercoat.
Annixter had telegraphed to his overseer to have the building repainted, replastered, and reshingled and to empty the rooms of everything but the telephone and safe.
In two places the ragged tear was knitting, I noted, as I replastered the hurt for the second time.
He slept as though drugged through the heat of the afternoon, then worked at night in the back garden, evolving designs for the nearly six thousand square feet of sky and stars that had to be replastered and made pretty.
It churned him up that he had to pay the girls for the time they spent in the toilet, so one Christmas when he had the place to himself he came in here with a time machine kit, built it round the toilet and replastered the walls so nobody would notice.
The dazzling yellow walls-cleaned and replastered after the Tyr-storm- lifted up in front of them, the freshly repainted portraits of the Lion-King were blurred, but colorful at this distance.
The walls had been replastered and painted, the floors sanded and refinished, the paneling cleaned and shined.
On October 11, 1975, we were married in the big living room of the little house at 930 California Drive, which had been replastered under the watchful eye of Marynm Bassett, a fine decorator who knew our budget was limited.
Mother had the walls replastered and wallpaper put up for the feast at the end of the celebrations.
As major replastering was obviously required, I packed my stuff again in nomadic boxes and drove them to the office, storing them in the leg-room under my desk.
She and I worked side by side replastering the ceiling and staining the walls and putting a parquet floor in and building an altar and getting some stained glass to replace the old dirty windows and building a number of pews so that the room could actually hold about thirty people.
As major replastering was obviously required, I packed my stuff again in nomadic boxes and drove them to the office, storing them in the leg-room under my desk.