


Spacing the scaffolds opens up the tree so light can penetrate, which encourages fruit production.On seeing the scaffold du Barry lost all control.to furnish with a scaffold or scaffolding. In order to meet students where they are and appropriately scaffold a lesson or. an elevated platform on which a criminal is executed, usu. Scaffolding and differentiation do have something in common, though. Two of the archers picked me up under the armpits and hustled me down the steps of the scaffold. a platform or framework for raising workers and materials during the erection, repair, or maintenance of a building or the like.When she did not, a son pleaded for her, so the bemused authorities took her from the scaffold.In education and learning, a instruction model that. A basic illustration is the usage of paper and pencil to carry out complicated arithmetic processes. He squeezed in time at the typewriter between the high-rise scaffolds and his duties as husband and father of two sons. Epistemological method of embodied cognition, wherein the environment that an agent functions within is observed as a sine qua non of its own cleverness.Provincial guillotines and scaffolds were dismantled and those not exhibited in museums were broken up and scrapped. scaffold (third-person singular simple present scaffolds, present participle scaffolding, simple past and past participle scaffolded) To set up a scaffolding to surround a building with scaffolding.From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Construction scaffold scaf‧fold / ˈskæf əld, -fəʊld $ -f əld, -foʊld / noun 1 TBC a structure built next to a wall, for workers to stand on while they build, repair, or paint a building 2 SCC a raised structure which was used in the past as a place to kill criminals by hanging them or cutting off their heads 3 American English TBC a structure that can be moved up and down to help people work on high buildings SYN cradle British English Examples from the Corpus scaffold
