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checkerwork

American  
[chek-er-wurk] / ˈtʃɛk ərˌwɜrk /

noun

  1. a pile of loosely stacked bricks in the regenerator of a regenerative furnace.


Etymology

Origin of checkerwork

checker 1 + work

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

That's what the checkerwork and fins are for—so that it can absorb the maximum amount of heat from the current of hot, moist air I spoke about.

From Spacehounds of IPC by Smith, E. E. (Edward Elmer)

In the kingdom of Godfrey of Boulogne lived mixed up together, formed into a kind of variegated checkerwork, people of all lands and languages of the Occident—French, Italians, Spanish, English, and Germans.

From The Continental Monthly, Vol. 4, No. 5, November, 1863 by Various

My arms were too long and shot from my sleeves, when poking out, and got exposed to the gas and flame, which were still rising in the checkerwork.

From Steel The Diary of a Furnace Worker by Walker, Charles Rumford

One named "Bony Part's March" was very pretty, as was "Orange Peel," and "Orange Trees"; "Dog Tracks" was even checkerwork, "Blazing Star," a herring-bone design.

From Home Life in Colonial Days by Earle, Alice Morse

Twelve enormous masses of metallic checkerwork, covered with wide cooling fins, almost filled the vast hall.

From Spacehounds of IPC by Smith, E. E. (Edward Elmer)