Offices on the upper floors have access to a roof terrace.
Plural of roof oxford english dictionary.
Australian children right up to the 1980s for example were brought up with the word.
Get a rooves mug for your girlfriend yasemin.
Rooves as a plural for of roof is dated but not incorrect.
The corner of the classroom was damp where the roof had leaked.
The vaulted upper boundary of the mouth supported largely by the palatine bones and limited anteriorly by the dental lamina and posteriorly by the uvula and upper part of the fauces.
1 the structure forming the upper covering of a building or vehicle.
The plural can be pronounced ruːfs or ruːvz.
Offices on the upper floors have access to a roof terrace.
You must be methuselah.
Ruːf word forms.
The oxford english dictionary lists rooves as an alternate to roofs one of several outdated spellings used in the uk and in new england as late as the 19th century.
Rooves is an older form of the word and rarely used these days.
Houses in villages are commonly rectangular and are dried mud bamboo or red brick structures with thatch roofs.
The roof of a building is the covering on top of it that protects the people and things inside from the weather.
The plural of roof is roofs or rooves.
Plural roofs pronunciation note.
Roof plural roofs or rooves the external covering at the top of a building.
The plural of roof for people old enough to read the oxford dictionary of the english language in fact old enough to know that the real napoleon was not dynamite or a brandy.
Hoi polloi live under roofs and civilized men live under rooves.
Plural roofs ˈrüfs ˈru fs also ˈrüvz ˈru vz medical definition of roof 1.
Tim climbed on to the garage roof.
The top external level of a building.
The roof of the car was not damaged in the accident.
Meaning pronunciation picture example sentences grammar usage notes synonyms and more.
A small stone cottage with a red slate roof.
Definition of plural 1 noun in oxford advanced learner s dictionary.
The roof was blown off by the tornado.
The oxford english dictionary lists rooves as an alternate to roofs one of several outdated spellings used in the uk and in new england as late as the 19th century.