Dictionary
sealant
noun
Any material used to seal a surface so as to prevent passage of a fluid.
synonyms
Exact(60)
This was a cosmetic application; the tape was used to keep uncured sealant in place; by no stretch was it "holding the window in" or any such claim.
A successful quick-fix to reduce energy consumption was to coat military tents with a thick layer of commercial insulating foam, of the kind used for cavity walls in homes, covered with a sealant to protect it from ultraviolet light.
The pour is carefully calibrated to create an aerodynamically efficient heap; sealant is sprayed evenly across the coal's surface to limit dust release.
When it reaches a crack, the sealant is sucked out of the train and into the crack in the same way that water is lost.
This composite acts as the sealant.
"So I put on my coat and second-best leather shoes, which I had sprayed the night before with waterproof sealant.
Hardly had he applied the sealant lick when – Gong! – a giant bell was struck, and the loudest sound I've ever heard reverberated through the whole city.
Just by buying some beading or mastic sealant, you could save £25 off your annual heating bill.
"He was coming up with cockamamie wind generators that would only work in hurricanes, different ways of saving energy with window sealant — just nonsense," Swersey said.
Tung oil is a natural sealant, as well as an effective paint thinner — in the late nineteen-thirties, it was China's single most valuable trade product.
He is employing his index finger to scratch at some transparent sealant that's been painted on the pier's exterior but looks just like the regular surface of concrete.
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