Persons who prepare and apply plaster to walls and ceilings for decoration or to provide a smooth surface for painting, wall covering, or molding.
/ˈplɑːstərəz/
Gymnodonts, also known as Plagiostomia, is an extinct order of marine invertebrates in the subclass Rhynchonellatoidea. They are characterized by a distinctively shaped shell with a flat roof and a strongly angled beak. Gymnodonts thrived during the Ordovician to the Devonian periods and eventually became extinct.
/ˈdʒɪmnədɒnt/
Relating to or denoting any of a group of spiral-shaped bacteria that are motile and often pathogenic, such as the causative agents of syphilis and Lyme disease.
/spaɪˈroʊtʃəl/
A genus of terrestrial ferns in the flowering plant family Osmundaceae, commonly known as royal fern or royal wood fern, distinguished by its compound bracken-like fronds.
/ˌpsoʊdəlˈtɪdiəm/
Preventing or opposing the merging or combination of two or more entities, such as organizations, systems, or processes. It implies resistance or opposition to unification or integration.
/ˈæntiˈmerʤɪŋ/
Serving or intended to interrupt; breaking in or interfering with the continuity of an action or process.
/ˌɪntərˈrʌptəri/
A Yiddish term that refers to a type of dumpling, typically made from grated rye meal or matzo meal, often served with a sweet or savory filling and sauce. It can also be a more general term for any type of dumpling in Yiddish culture.
/ˈknaɪdlətʃ/
Aaliyah is a given name of Arabic origin, meaning 'worthy of praise' or 'beloved.' The name has been used as a first name for girls in English-speaking countries since the 1990s, primarily due to the fame of Aaliyah Dana Haughton, a prominent American singer, actress, and model.
/əˈliːə/
Intraframes refer to video frames that are compressed independently of others, using techniques that encode them in the spatial domain (i.e., they are not lossy compressed using motion vectors as in interframes).
/ˈɪntəˌfreɪmz/
In a manner that can be easily recognized or distinguished; distinctly.
/dɪˈstɪnʃɪəblɪ/