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floorboard

[ flawr-bawrd, flohr-bohrd ]

noun

  1. any of the boards composing a floor.
  2. the floor of an automotive vehicle.


verb (used with object)

floorboard

/ ˈڱɔːˌɔː /

noun

  1. one of the boards forming a floor
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of floorboard1

First recorded in 1880–85; floor + board
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Ms Ramsden said her son, who has additional needs, had struggled with the bare floorboards.

From

Later, there were so many people in the auction room that punters were pushed under the stage and watched through cracks in the floorboards.

From

The trust advises draught-proofing your home, including round floorboards, pipework and old extractor fans, and setting the thermostat to the lowest comfortable temperature.

From

Our footsteps squeaked as we walked across the dark wood floorboards.

From

The 10-year-old stood outside the only home he’d ever known — a home he could traverse in total darkness, whose every floorboard and door jamb he knew like the back of his hand.

From

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More About Floorboard

doesfloorboard mean?

A floorboard is one of the usually wooden planks that make up a floor.

It usually refers to a board of plywood used to make a subfloor—the rough floor beneath a finished floor. Many houses are constructed using floorboards to create a subfloor, which is then often covered with materials like hardwood, carpet, tile, linoleum, or some form of laminate flooring.

The word floorboard means something else in the context of vehicles—it refers to the floor of a car or truck.

This sense of the word is the basis of the slang verb floorboard, meaning to press a vehicle’s accelerator (gas pedal) as far down as possible (all the way to the floor) in order to go as fast as possible. The word floor is more commonly used to mean the same thing. Both terms are often followed by it, as in As soon as the light turned green, I floorboarded it so I could get way ahead of all the other cars.

Example: I pried up a loose floorboard hoping to find treasure under, but there was just a lot of dust and dirt.

Where doesfloorboard come from?

The first records of the word floorboard come from the 1880s. The word board is commonly used to refer to a thin plank of wood.

In movies, people are always hiding things—or finding things hidden—under the floorboards, like stashes of money or secret letters. Sometimes, there’s even a secret room under the floorboards that’s used to hide people from the bad guys, who are often shown walking on the floorboards and causing dust to fall on the people who are trying to stay quietly hidden below.

Did you know ... ?

are some words that share a root or word element with floorboard?

are some words that often get used in discussing floorboard?

How isfloorboard used in real life?

Floorboards are a common part of most houses. When people use the word, it’s usually in the context of construction, renovation, or floorboards that squeak too much.

Try usingfloorboard!

True or False?

When floorboard is used as a slang term, the phrase floorboard it! means the same thing as floor it!

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