English language

How to pronounce sheeting in English?

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Type Words
Type of cloth, fabric, material, textile
Derivation sheet

Examples of sheeting

sheeting
Four years ago, it was covered with two feet of topsoil and protective sheeting.
From the businessweek.com
Shelters made of cardboard and plastic sheeting are scattered across the grounds.
From the voanews.com
Crude holes for snipers were covered with plastic sheeting or stuffed with cloth.
From the denverpost.com
I'm rewarded with the beauty of water sheeting cleanly off well-seasoned metal.
From the charlotteobserver.com
Dusty black rubber sheeting covers the ground by day and at night serves as roof.
From the time.com
Joseph Jao owns a business in Taipei exporting plastic sheeting and nylon fabrics.
From the voanews.com
The material was wrapped in the kind of plastic sheeting used by dry cleaners.
From the time.com
Plastic sheeting has no place in the garden and it should not be used under mulch.
From the chron.com
By now a freezing wind was blowing and driving rain was sheeting through the camp.
From the nzherald.co.nz
More examples
  • Fabric from which bed sheets are made
  • A bed sheet is a piece of cloth used to cover a mattress. It is this sheet that one typically lies on.
  • (sheeted) To be covered by a sheet of cloth or paper or other similar material; To be secured by a special tarpaulin
  • Sheeted hang tabs are cluster parts that have been trimmed to a convenient handheld size. Sheeted parts are usually formatted in groups of 10, 20, 24, or 36 parts per sheet. Sheeted parts are ideal for hand application, either at the packaging facility or in the store. ...
  • A form of plastic in which the thickness is very small in proportion to length and width and in which the plastic is present as a continuous phase throughout.
  • The term used to describe a fine weave quality of cotton muslin fabric.
  • A sturdy, plain-woven cloth usually made of cotton that can be found in mediumweights or heavyweights, suitable for forming into bedsheets.
  • The act of rolling dough into a very thin and uniform sheet. Most commonly performed using a specialized machine known as a dough sheeter or dough roller. A rolling pin may also be used, but this technique can be slow and labor-intensive.
  • A set of joints formed essentially parallel to the surface. It allows layers of rock to fall off as the weight of overlying rock is removed by erosion. It is especially well developed in granitic rock.