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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
sandpaper
I.noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ My voice is like sandpaper, I cough up gobs of phlegm, my liver feels like a sandbag.
▪ Next, smooth off any sharp edges with sandpaper, replace the saddle sections in the correct order and restring.
▪ Only 38 percent of young adults could use a chart to pick the right grade of sandpaper.
▪ Small imperfections such as cuts and scratches can be sanded out with fine sandpaper.
▪ Those hands, he felt sure, had not wielded saw or sandpaper.
▪ You dream up a yard of sandpaper, damp, you're talking tongue.
II.verb
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Added to which, my limbs had begun to ache and my tonsils felt as if some one had sandpapered them.
▪ The instructions had to be carefully studied, the little staircase sandpapered down and fitted into place.
▪ The only reliable cure for it is to sandpaper off the damaged surface of the plywood.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Sandpaper

Sandpaper \Sand"pa`per\, n. Paper covered on one side with sand glued fast, -- used for smoothing and polishing.

Sandpaper

Sandpaper \Sand"pa`per\, v. t. To smooth or polish with sandpaper; as, to sandpaper a door.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
sandpaper

1835, from sandpaper (n.). \nRelated: Sandpapered; sandpapering.

sandpaper

also sand-paper, 1788, from sand (n.) + paper (n.).

Wiktionary
sandpaper

n. 1 a strong paper coated with sand or other abrasive material for smoothing and polishing. 2 a sheet of such paper vb. (context transitive English) To polish or grind (a surface) with or as if with sandpaper.

WordNet
sandpaper
  1. n. stiff paper coated with powdered emery or sand [syn: emery paper]

  2. v. rub with sandpaper; "sandpaper the wooden surface" [syn: sand]

Wikipedia
Sandpaper

Sandpaper or glasspaper are names used for a type of coated abrasive that consists of sheets of paper or cloth with abrasive material glued to one face. Despite the use of the names neither sand nor glass are now used in the manufacture of these products as they have been replaced by other abrasives. Sandpaper is produced in a range of grit sizes and is used to remove material from surfaces, either to make them smoother (for example, in painting and wood finishing), to remove a layer of material (such as old paint), or sometimes to make the surface rougher (for example, as a preparation for gluing). It is common to use the name of the abrasive when describing the paper, e.g. "aluminium oxide paper", or "silicon carbide" paper.

Grit refers to the average particle diameter. The larger the grit, the smaller the particle size. The smaller the grit, the coarser the particles are.

Usage examples of "sandpaper".

On the Moon, though, the surface is dangerous: big temperature swings between sunlight and shadow, ionizing radiation constantly sleeting in from the Sun and stars, micrometeoroids peppering the ground and sandpapering everything exposed to them.

I am tempted to take Silvia and flee to Stick Around to observe the progress on my house, to watch Clifford Stone and his restorationists make love to it with their scrapers, their sandpaper, their paint remover, and their fancy wallpapering equipment.

Everywhere, there was the smell of glue and unprimed wood, of sandpaper dust and paint.

Sandpaper, calking material and calking compound, antifouling marine hull paint, deck paint and varnish.

Secoh sat back, polishing bones with the rough upper surfaces of their forked tongues, which were abrasive as the coarsest sandpaper.

Occasionally Brother Carpenter stopped to frown disapprovingly at it, then to work on the creases around the eyes with a dental pick, or caress between the fingers with fine sandpaper.

Bedding, cookware, food, candles, a tin box of lucifer matches and the sandpaper needed to ignite them, a dry bundle of fatwood kindling, a coil of rope, a hand axe, shotgun with powder and shot and wadding, grain for the horse, a mattock and spade.

Nothing seemed to be under construction, but there was an antique bookrest whose varnish had been mostly scraped off with sandpaper: Gwyn, evidently, was trying to make it look like his own work.

He permitted himself a moment to run his hand down the steel-smooth skin of the back, then backward against the grain of the dermal denticles, which felt like rubbing sandpaper.

We called him 'Black Peter' and when we went to watch him working he'd sometimes let us help him with sandpapering or boiling up the smelly animal glue.

The way of the truthful-by-nature is as a bicycle race in a pair of sandpaper underpants, but William clung to an indisputable fact.

He worked first with the scraps left from the Bambino, rubbing the dirt of the garden into the crystals with his fingers, then sandpapering lightly before applying another layer, staining the outside edges heavily with earth tans and rust, using a hard bristle brush to bury the discoloration.

It could have been a figure of white stone, or a scattering of bones, or simply the bleached roots of an olive or carob tree long drowned in the desert's ergs and sandpapered to a reflective whiteness.

I felt the fractional grip, like gentle sandpaper, as it took, and then a long cold finger leapt down past my collar bone and deep into my chest.

Having polished the metal mirror-smooth with fine grit sandpaper, he was now applying a solution of copper chloride and hydrochloric acid to dissolve scarred metal and restore the deeply stamped number underneath that the killer thought he had filed away.