Sash vs Sashless - What's the difference?
sash | sashless |
A decorative length of cloth worn as a broad belt or over the shoulder, often for ceremonial or other formal occasions.
To adorn with a sash or scarf.
The opening part of a window usually containing the glass panes, hinged to the jamb, or sliding up and down as in a sash window.
(software, graphical user interface) A draggable vertical or horizontal bar used to adjust the relative sizes of two adjacent windows.
In a sawmill, the rectangular frame in which the saw is strained and by which it is carried up and down with a reciprocating motion; the gate.
Without a sash.
* 1959 , They're testing tomorrow's homes'' (in ''Popular Mechanics volume 111 number 3, March 1959, page 102)
As a noun sash
is a decorative length of cloth worn as a broad belt or over the shoulder, often for ceremonial or other formal occasions or sash can be the opening part of a window usually containing the glass panes, hinged to the jamb, or sliding up and down as in a sash window.As a verb sash
is to adorn with a sash or scarf.As an adjective sashless is
without a sash.sash
English
Etymology 1
(etyl) .Noun
(es)Synonyms
* belt, strap, waistbandVerb
(es)- (Burke)
Etymology 2
, taken as a plural and -s trimmed off by 1704. See also chassis.Noun
(es)Synonyms
* (GUI) splittersashless
English
Adjective
(-)- Windows in the South Bend house are sashless . They are simply plates of glass that slide in the grooves of a wood casing.