gyprock
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]gyprock (countable and uncountable, plural gyprocks)
- Rock rich in gypsum; gypsic soil.
- 1979, Richard Vincent Dietrich, Brian J. Skinner, Rocks and rock minerals, page 215:
- Some high quality white or variously tinted fine-grained gyprocks, usually referred to as alabaster, were used as interior facing stones and for small statues and carved decorative objects found in Egyptian pyramids
- 2006, R. Lal, Encyclopedia of soil science 1[1], page 796:
- The world distribution of gyprock outcrops and the solubility of gypsum restrict the extensive occurrence of gypsic soils to the dry regions
- Drywall.
- 2012, Richard Harris, Building a Market: The Rise of the Home Improvement Industry[2], page 55:
- Cinder blocks were more durable, however, and soon gypsum was redirected for “gyprock” drywall, a wallboard...
Synonyms
[edit]- (drywall): Thesaurus:drywall
Verb
[edit]gyprock (third-person singular simple present gyprocks, present participle gyprocking, simple past and past participle gyprocked)
- (construction, transitive) To drywall.