English edit

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

plucking

  1. present participle and gerund of pluck

Noun edit

plucking (countable and uncountable, plural pluckings)

  1. (gerund of pluck) An act in which something is plucked.
    • 2007 April 27, The New York Times, “Pop and Rock Listings”, in New York Times[1]:
      Dirty Projectors builds elaborate “glitch operas” with stark pluckings of strings [] .
  2. A fragment of something obtained by plucking.
    • 1937, Archibald Dixon Shamel, Carl Schurz Scofield, David A. Savage, Wheat Requirements in Europe:
      Yield per acre and moisture content of grass pluckings taken at 14- or 28-day intervals during the seasons of 1933 and 1934
  3. (printing) The undesirable situation in which printed ink becomes detached from the paper.
    • 1959, E. A. Apps, Printing Ink Technology, page 415:
      Letterpress and offset gloss varnishes normally have viscosities varying from 50 to 250 poises; they must stain the paper as little as possible, have insufficient tack to cause plucking, []