0 a substance that is spread on walls in order to make them smooth -- gips
1 a small piece of sticky material that you put on cuts on your body -- plaster
2 If your arm or leg is in plaster, it is covered in a hard, white substance to protect a broken bone. -- być w gipsie , ≈ mieć coś w gipsie
4 to cover a wall with a substance in order to make it smooth -- tynkować
They were only a little larger than the human head and were made out of materials such as linen and plaster.
The snake-handlers in these novels are usually blustering patriarchs, sometimes violent ' ' plaster saints ' ' but always charismatic - if philandering - husbands and fathers.
They returned to the tent with ample food and plaster bandages - but the plaster proved useless, spoiled by the damp.
The completed 'shells', plastered and painted and indistinguishable visually, will have basic structural actions independent of their construction.
External doors seem to be completely absent, and many ladder imprints have been found in the wall plaster at the site.
The grave consisted of a simple limestone slab-lined crypt originally closed by a wooden lid sealed in place with plaster.
Later in the 20th century, plaster was removed from most of the surviving timber-framed houses.
It is a plaster wall, or a sheet of canvas, a panel, a screen, or a piece of paper.