Found 4 items, similar to flatting.
English → Indonesian (quick)
Definition: flat
adem, campah, datar, gepeng, guntung, papak, papar
Indonesian → English (quick)
Definition: flat
apartment
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: flatting
flat
adj 1: having a horizontal surface in which no part is higher or
lower than another;
“a flat desk”;
“acres of level
farmland”;
“a plane surface” [syn:
level,
plane]
2: having no depth or thickness
3: not modified or restricted by reservations;
“a categorical
denial”;
“a flat refusal” [syn:
categoric,
categorical,
unconditional]
4: stretched out and lying at full length along the ground;
“found himself lying flat on the floor” [syn:
prostrate]
5: lacking contrast or shading between tones [ant:
contrasty]
6: lowered in pitch by one chromatic semitone;
“B flat” [ant:
natural,
sharp]
7: flattened laterally along the whole length (e.g., certain
leafstalks or flatfishes) [syn:
compressed]
8: lacking taste or flavor or tang;
“a bland diet”;
“insipid
hospital food”;
“flavorless supermarket tomatoes”;
“vapid
beer”;
“vapid tea” [syn:
bland,
flavorless,
flavourless,
insipid,
savorless,
savourless,
vapid]
9: lacking stimulating characteristics; uninteresting;
“a bland
little drama”;
“a flat joke” [syn:
bland]
10: having lost effervescence;
“flat beer”;
“a flat cola”
11: not increasing as the amount taxed increases [syn:
fixed]
12: not made with leavening;
“most flat breads are made from
unleavened dough” [syn:
unraised]
13: parallel to the ground;
“a flat roof”
14: without pleats [syn:
unpleated]
15: lacking the expected range or depth; not designed to give an
illusion or depth;
“a film with two-dimensional
characters”;
“a flat two-dimensional painting” [syn:
two-dimensional]
16: (of a tire) completely or partially deflated
17: not reflecting light; not glossy;
“flat wall paint”;
“a
photograph with a matte finish” [syn:
mat,
matt,
matte,
matted]
18: lacking variety in shading;
“a flat unshaded painting”
[also:
flatting,
flatted,
flattest,
flatter]
flat
adv 1: at full length;
“he fell flat on his face”
2: with flat sails;
“sail flat against the wind”
3: below the proper pitch;
“she sang flat last night”
4: against a flat surface;
“he lay flat on his back”
5: in a forthright manner; candidly or frankly;
“he didn't
answer directly”;
“told me straight out”;
“came out flat
for less work and more pay” [syn:
directly,
straight]
[ant:
indirectly]
6: wholly or completely;
“He is flat broke”
[also:
flatting,
flatted,
flattest,
flatter]
flat
n 1: a level tract of land
2: a shallow box in which seedlings are started
3: a musical notation indicating one half step lower than the
note named
4: freight car without permanent sides or roof [syn:
flatcar,
flatbed]
5: a deflated pneumatic tire [syn:
flat tire]
6: scenery consisting of a wooden frame covered with painted
canvas; part of a stage setting
7: a suite of rooms usually on one floor of an apartment house
[syn:
apartment]
[also:
flatting,
flatted,
flattest,
flatter]
flatting
See
flat
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Flatting
Flat
\Flat\, v. t. [imp. & p. p.
Flatted; p. pr. & vb. n.
Flatting.]
1. To make flat; to flatten; to level.
[1913 Webster]
2. To render dull, insipid, or spiritless; to depress.
[1913 Webster]
Passions are allayed, appetites are flatted.
--Barrow.
[1913 Webster]
3. To depress in tone, as a musical note; especially, to
lower in pitch by half a tone.
[1913 Webster]
Flatting
\Flat"ting\, n.
1. The process or operation of making flat, as a cylinder of
glass by opening it out.
[1913 Webster]
2. A mode of painting,in which the paint, being mixed with
turpentine, leaves the work without gloss. --Gwilt.
[1913 Webster]
3. A method of preserving gilding unburnished, by touching
with size. --Knolles.
[1913 Webster]
4. The process of forming metal into sheets by passing it
between rolls.
[1913 Webster]
Flatting coat, a coat of paint so put on as to have no
gloss.
Flatting furnace. Same as
flattening oven, under
Flatten.
Flatting mill.
(a) A rolling mill producing sheet metal; esp., in mints,
the mill producing the ribbon from which the planchets
are punched.
(b) A mill in which grains of metal are flatted by steel
rolls, and reduced to metallic dust, used for purposes
of ornamentation.
[1913 Webster]