rubble I. nounEtymology: Middle English robylDate: 14th century
1.a. broken fragments (as of rock) resulting from the decay or
destruction of a building <fortifications knocked into rubble
— C. S. Forester> b. a miscellaneous confused mass or group
of usually broken or worthless things
2. waterworn or rough broken stones or bricks used in coarse masonry
or in filling courses of walls 3. rough stone as it comes from
the quarry
II. transitive verb (rubbled; rubbling)
Date: 1926 to reduce to rubble
rubble n. 1 waste or rough fragments of stone or brick etc. 2 pieces of undressed stone used, esp. as filling-in, for walls. 3 Geol. loose angular stones etc. as the covering of some
rocks. 4 water-worn stones. Derivatives: rubbly adj. Etymology: ME robyl, rubel, of uncert. orig.: cf. OF robe spoils
rubble
1. When a building is destroyed, the pieces of brick, stone, or other materials that remain
are referred to as rubble.
Thousands of bodies are still buried under the rubble...N-UNCOUNT
2. Rubble is used to refer to the small pieces of bricks and stones that are used as
a bottom layer on which to build roads, paths, or houses.
Brick rubble is useful as the base for paths and patios.N-UNCOUNT
rubble
ˈrʌbl n. 1 waste or rough fragments of stone or brick etc. 2 pieces
of undressed stone used, esp. as filling-in, for walls. 3 Geol. loose angular
stones etc. as the covering of some rocks. 4 water-worn stones. øørubbly
adj. [ME robyl, rubel, of uncert. orig.: cf. OF robe spoils]
Rubble \Rub"ble\, n. [From an assumed Old French dim. of robe
See Rubbish.]
1. Water-worn or rough broken stones; broken bricks, etc.,
used in coarse masonry, or to fill up between the facing
courses of walls.
Inside [the wall] there was rubble or mortar.
--Jowett
(Thucyd.).
2. Rough stone as it comes from the quarry; also, a
quarryman's term for the upper fragmentary and decomposed
portion of a mass of stone; brash. --Brande & C.
3. (Geol.) A mass or stratum of fragments or rock lying under
the alluvium, and derived from the neighboring rock.
--Lyell.
4. pl. The whole of the bran of wheat before it is sorted
into pollard, bran, etc. [Prov. Eng.] --Simmonds.
Coursed rubble, rubble masonry in which courses are formed
by leveling off the work at certain heights.
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