See also: rubber-band and rubber band

English edit

Noun edit

rubberband (plural rubberbands)

  1. Alternative form of rubber band
    • 1998, Natural Hair Care and Braiding, →ISBN, page 114:
      Once the hair is sewn onto the foundation, use the proper styling aids to blend all natural hair that is not in rubberbands into the commercial hair, if necessary.
    • 1999, Jennifer Overend Prior, Janet A. Hale, Bats, →ISBN, page 39:
      Provide each child, or pair of children, with a shoebox (shoebox lid is not needed) and different sizes and thicknesses of rubberbands. The children are to stretch several different sizes of rubberbands around the entire shoebox's girth.
    • 2008, Susan E. Harris, Grooming To Win, →ISBN, page 203:
      Braiding with rubberbands is quicker than sewing in yarn or thread but it is not acceptable for high-level competition, and it will break off hairs and damage the mane.

Verb edit

rubberband (third-person singular simple present rubberbands, present participle rubberbanding, simple past and past participle rubberbanded)

  1. (uncommon) Alternative form of rubber-band
    • 2001, Braiding: Easy Styles for Everyone, →ISBN, page 71:
      Rubberband them together.
    • 2013, Phil Rickman, The Fabric of Sin, →ISBN:
      Long red-gray hair in a rubberbanded ponytail, []
    • 2014, Steve Hullfish, Avid Uncut, →ISBN:
      Editors are very set in their ways of whether they prefer doing level changes within a clip by rubberbanding or by breaking the clip into pieces and adjusting the levels of each piece.