The top inner surface of a covered area or space.
Roofs or rooves oxford dictionary.
Roofs is the standard plural form of the noun roof which is a covering over a building.
The plural of roof for people old enough to read the oxford dictionary of the english language in fact old enough to know that the real napoleon was not dynamite or a brandy.
Rooves as a plural for of roof is dated but not incorrect.
The corner of the classroom was damp where the roof had leaked.
Offices on the upper floors have access to a roof terrace.
These are special liners on the sides and sometimes the roof and back of an oven which are treated with a material that absorbs those greasy splashes.
To grow intensify or rise to an enormous often unexpected degree.
Hoi polloi live under roofs and civilized men live under rooves.
Australian children right up to the 1980s for example were brought up with the word.
The plural of roof is roofs or rooves.
Transitive slang to put into prison to bird.
Operating costs went through the roof last year.
The roof of the car was not damaged in the accident.
You must be methuselah.
Go through the roof slang 1.
Rooves is an older form of the word and rarely used these days.
Tim climbed on to the garage roof.
To traverse buildings by walking or climbing across their roofs.
Roof third person singular simple present roofs present participle roofing simple past and past participle roofed transitive to cover or furnish with a roof.
The structure that covers or forms the top of a building or vehicle.
The oxford english dictionary lists rooves as an alternate to roofs one of several outdated spellings used in the uk and in new england as late as the 19th century.