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calender
[ kal-uhn-der ]
noun
- a machine in which cloth, paper, or the like, is smoothed, glazed, etc., by pressing between rotating cylinders.
- a machine for impregnating fabric with rubber, as in the manufacture of automobile tires.
verb (used with object)
- to press in a calender.
calender
1/ ˈkælɪndə /
noun
- a machine in which paper or cloth is glazed or smoothed by passing between rollers
verb
- tr to subject (material) to such a process
calender
2/ ˈkælɪndə /
noun
- a member of a mendicant order of dervishes in Turkey, Iran, and India
Other Words From
- calen·der·er noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of calender1
Origin of calender2
Example Sentences
I am a linendraper bold, as all the world doth know; And my good friend, the calender, will lend his horse to go.
Away went Gilpin out of breath, and sore against his will, Till at his friend the calender's his horse at last stood still.
Moir or “watered” effects are produced in a similar way, but these effects are frequently imitated in the embossing calender.
The embossing calender is usually constructed of two bowls, one of which is of steel and the other of compressed cotton or paper.
To calender paper, it is run through a series of alternate "chilled" and "paper" rolls.
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