pantile

English

A 19th-century waggoner's rest roofed with pantiles in Searby, Lincolnshire, UK, in which travellers would wait for their wagons

Etymology

From pan + tile.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˈpantʌɪl/

Noun

pantile (plural pantiles)

  1. A type of interlocking roof tile with a rounded under and over, giving it an elongated S shape.
    • 1977, Bruce Chatwin, In Patagonia, Penguin Classics 2003, p. 8:
      The houses of the estancias shrank behind screens of poplar and eucalyptus. Some of the houses had pantile roofs, but most were of metal sheet, painted red.
    • 2004, Richard Fortey, The Earth, Folio Society 2011, p. 103:
      All the gneiss roofing slates have vanished, to be replaced by pantiles painting patchworks of all possible orange hues.
    • 2014 October 26, Jeff Howell, “Is the Japanese knotweed threat exaggerated? Our troubleshooter calls for calm about Japanese knotweed in the garden – and moss on the roof [print version: Don't panic about an overhyped invasion, 25 October 2014, p. P13]”, in The Daily Telegraph (Property):
      Some old, underfired clay pantiles might be damaged by button mosses rooting in cracks and fissures. But most post-war tiles are hard enough to withstand a bit of moss growth.
  2. (obsolete, slang) A hat.
    • 1830, Charles Cochrane, The Journal of a Tour Made by Señor Juan de Vega (page 243)
      "So you are a Quaker, master, are you?" he added, "Well, I thought somehow, by the cut of your pantile, (hat) you was something or other in that way."
    • 1885, Good Words (volume 26, page 107)
      Hats or ordinary caps can be worn over them, and they are much used by the drivers of hack-carriages and horse-cars. Those who cannot afford a fur cap, ear-muff, or pantile, tie a handkerchief over their ears, []
  3. (obsolete) A flat jam-covered cake.

Derived terms

Verb

pantile (third-person singular simple present pantiles, present participle pantiling, simple past and past participle pantiled)

  1. (transitive) To tile with pantiles.

References

  • (hat; cake): 1873, John Camden Hotten, The Slang Dictionary

Anagrams

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