lumber$45653$ - traducción al italiano
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lumber$45653$ - traducción al italiano

ROOM TO STORE CURRENTLY UN-NEEDED FURNITURE
Lumber rooms; Lumber-room; Lumber-rooms

lumber      
v. (Silv) tagliare il legname di; (fig) ingombrare; (fig) ammucchiare, ammonticchiare, accatastare
lumber room         
ripostiglio, sgabuzzino
saw-mill         
  • 1900}}
  • 1920}}
  • 18th-century allegorical print commemorating C.C. van Uitgeest's invention of the saw mill.
  • Illustration of a human-powered sawmill with a gang-saw, published in 1582.
  • A sawmill of [[Naistenlahti]] in [[Tampere]], Finland, 1890s
  • crank]] and [[connecting rod]] mechanism.<ref name="Ritti, Grewe, Kessener 2000, 161"/>
  • Oregon Mill using energy efficient ponding to move logs
  • "''De Salamander''" a wind driven sawmill in [[Leidschendam]], Netherlands. Built in 1792, it was used until 1953, when it fell into disrepair. It was fully restored in 1989.
  • Early 20th-century sawmill, maintained at [[Jerome, Arizona]].
PLANT FOR PROCESSING TREE TRUNKS INTO BOARDS AND BEAMS
Saw mill; Lumber mill; Saw-mill; Timber mill; Sawmiller; Lumbermill; Sawmilling; Flitch (wood); Saw mills; Saw-milling; Sawmills; History of sawmills; Cant (log); Bandsaw mill; Lumber mills
segheria

Definición

lumber
I
n. (esp. AE) green; seasoned lumber (CE has timber)
II
v. (P; intr.) the bear lumbered through the forest
III
v. (colloq.) (BE) (D; tr.) ('to burden') to lumber with (I've been lumbered with all their problems)

Wikipedia

Lumber room

In British usage, a lumber room is a room in a house used primarily for storing unused furniture. British stately homes often had more furniture than could be used at one time, and storing the furniture for future use was more common than selling or discarding it.

The first reference to the phrase "lumber room" in the Oxford English Dictionary is the 1740 novel Pamela. Subsequent references can be found in A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, Arthur Conan Doyle's 1891 Sherlock Holmes short story "The Five Orange Pips", and The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien. A lumber room is described in detail in Saki's short story "The Lumber Room":

Often and often Nicholas had pictured to himself what the lumber-room might be like, that region that was so carefully sealed from youthful eyes and concerning which no questions were ever answered. It came up to his expectations. In the first place it was large and dimly lit, one high window opening on to the forbidden garden being its only source of illumination. In the second place it was a storehouse of unimagined treasures.

The OED mentions in the verb "lumbering" that it first meant to obstruct with pieces of wood to make things from, and then shifted to general obstruction, hence furniture fit the later meaning.