frankpledge the responsibility of each division of a community to carry out police duties and to see to it that the law is upheld.
glebe land cultivated to help support a parish church.
hue and cry a law requiring that all citizens within earshot give chase to a fleeing criminal.
infangenethef the right to confiscate the belongings of a convicted thief.
leirwite a fine given a single woman for sexual indiscretions.
manor a lord's estate, including those portions cultivated by tenants.
merchet a serf's payment for a daughter's marriage.
messuage a house and yard in a village.
mortuary a duty, usually one's second-best beast, paid to the church upon death.
pannage a fee paid to a lord to allow one's pigs to forage for acorns, nuts, and apples on a forest floor.
reeve a manor official who made sure that tenants who owed the lord of the manor labor repaid him promptly.
serf a peasant; a villein.
tallage an annual tax paid by villeins to a lord.
tithe traditional donation of 10 percent of all crops to the church.
tithing a group of 10 to 12 men, each responsible for the other's behavior in a village.
toft a yard of a house in a village.
villein a serf.
virgate a unit of land from 18 to 32 acres, thought to be sufficient to support a peasant and his family.
woodward a manor official responsible for a lord's woodland.
HOUSE CONSTRUCTION
aggregate sand, stone, or gravel used to make concrete.
anchor bolts bolts set in the top of a concrete foundation to hold structural members in place.
backfill earth mounded up around a foundation's walls to create a slope for water runoff.
balloon framing a form of house construction in which the upright studs extend all the way from the sill to the roof, a technique that has largely grown out of favor.
balusters the spindles or poles that support a stair railing.
balustrade a row of balusters topped with a rail.
baseboard the interior trim that runs around the walls next to the floor.
batten a strip of wood used to cover a joint, especially between siding boards.
bay window any curved, rectangular, or polygonal window that projects out from a wall.
beam a large, supportive structural member, usually running from one foundation wall to another and held up by pillars or poles.
bearing wall any wall that bears the weight of a ceiling, floor, or roof above it. Also known as a load- bearing wall or a bearing partition.
belvedere a small, glass-enclosed room used as a lookout on the roof of a house.
berm a mound or bank of earth formed to shunt drainage away from a house.
bevel to cut at an angle, as in beveled siding; thicker on one end than the other.
bibcock or bib nozzle a faucet on the outside of the house around or above the foundation. Also known as a sill cock.
board-and-batten siding siding of broad boards lined together with narrow boards or battens nailed over their joints.
breezeway a sheltered passageway between a garage and a house.
bricklaying The following are common terms.
common bond a bricklaying style characterized by several courses of overlapping stretchers interspersed with an occasional course of headers.
course one row of bricks.
English bond a bricklaying style characterized by alternating courses of headers and stretchers.
Flemish bond a bricklaying style characterized by courses consisting of alternating headers and stretchers forming an overall diamond pattern.
garden wall a bricklaying style characterized by courses in which every fourth brick is a header.
header a brick laid with its short end facing out.
rowlock a header laid on its narrow side.
running bond a bricklaying style characterized by overlapping courses of stretchers and no headers.
house construction 33
shiner a stretcher with its broad side facing out.
soldier a brick laid standing on end.
stacked bond a bricklaying style characterized by nonoverlapping courses of stretchers.
stretcher a brick laid lengthwise.
bridging small pieces of wood crossed between studs to add rigidity and to distribute load.
casement window a hinged window that swings open along one vertical edge.
casing the trim around a door or a window.
caulking sealing material used to waterproof cracks and joints, especially around doors and windows.
clapboard a long, beveled board used for siding.
collar beam a beam that connects rafters. Also known as a rafter tie.
conduit, electrical a pipe or tube through which wiring is run.
corbel a projection of wood or masonry to add structural support to a wall.