decate
English
editEtymology
editFrom French décatir ("to remove the cati from"), from catir.
Verb
editdecate (third-person singular simple present decates, present participle decating, simple past and past participle decated)
- To decatize (“steam fabric”).
- 1955, Modern Textiles Magazine:
- It is therefore important to decate only very slightly.
- 1956, John V. Haggard, Manufacture of Clothing, 1945-53, page 186:
- The Commanding General wished to know whether cloth going into storage should ever be decated. The opinion of the technologist was that , if the cloth was decated in the presence of DDT, the mothicide would steam-distill out […]
- 2002, Marypaul Yates, Fabrics: A Guide for Interior Designers and Architects, W. W. Norton & Company, →ISBN, page 159:
- Next it will be […] neatly rolled, and finally pressed or decated (pressed with steam). Each of these processes requires several hours and specific equipment.
Galician
editVerb
editdecate
- inflection of decatar: