toothing

English

Etymology

From tooth +‎ -ing.

Noun

toothing (countable and uncountable, plural toothings)

  1. The act or process of indenting or furnishing with teeth.
  2. Teething (growing of teeth).
  3. (stamps) Tooth-like projections from the perforated edges of a stamp after separation along from its sheet.
  4. (construction) Bricks alternately projecting at the end of a wall, in order to be bonded into a continuation of it when the remainder is carried up.
  5. (botany) A configuration of a leaf margin with teeth, such as of a dentate, serrate, or crenate leaf.
  6. The suppose use of Bluetooth-enabled mobile phones or PDAs to arrange random sexual encounters (a hoax intended to highlight journalists' gullibility and poor fact-checking if they reported it as real).
    • 2011, Ulrike Bucher, Maro Finka, The Electronic City, page 69:
      Bluetooth has lately been associated with the practice of "toothing" or sending messages via Bluetooth in public spaces as attempts to find (sexual) partners.

Derived terms

  • toothing plane

Verb

toothing

  1. present participle and gerund of tooth

References