sideboard
See also: Sideboard
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
Audio (US): (file)
Noun
sideboard (plural sideboards)
- (furniture) A piece of dining room furniture having drawers and shelves for linen and tableware; originally for serving food.
- A board or similar barrier that forms part of the side of something.
- 2000, William Gay, Provinces of Night, page 196:
- Fleming watched the sideboarded truck diminish down the rolling hillside, the stackers atop the hay clutching the sideboards and swaying and bouncing toward the barn.
- (collectible card games) A set of cards that are separate from a player's primary deck, used to customize a match strategy against an opponent by enabling a player to change the composition of the playing deck.
- 1995, Larry W. Smith, Learn Magic Cards, →ISBN, page 80:
- Cards can only be exchanged between the playing deck and the sideboard on a one-to-one basis between duels or matches, and any number of cards, up to fifteen, can be exchanged at once.
- 1995, George Baxter & Larry W. Smith, Mastering magic cards, →ISBN:
- Many of your best chances to overcome opposing decks lie in the development of a strong sideboard.
- 2006, John Kaufeld & Jeremy Smith, Trading Card Games For Dummies, →ISBN, page 61:
- If you plan on playing in tournaments, you'll want to construct a sideboard for your deck.
- 2010, Kelly Nicole Czarnecki, Gaming in Libraries, →ISBN, page 54:
- They can have a 15-card sideboard or no sideboard. The sideboard can be used to replace cards in the deck after each game.
- (fishing) A restriction on using the right to catch a certain number of fish that was granted in relation to a different fishery.
- 2012, Federal Register - Volume 77, Issue 50, page 15226:
- Conversely, in fisheries with increasing sideboards, economic benefit could be denied to the sideboarded sectors.
Translations
furniture
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a board that forms part of the side of something
|
sideburns — see sideburns
Verb
sideboard (third-person singular simple present sideboards, present participle sideboarding, simple past and past participle sideboarded)
- (collectible card games) To include (a card) in one's sideboard.
- 1995, Charles Wolfe, Deep Magic:
- Hopefully you now have a strong grasp on how to sideboard effectively.
- 1996, George Baxter, Tables of Magic, page 43:
- This will cause an opponent to suffer from a number of his newly sideboarded cards, now useless to him.
- 2002, Steve Frohnhoefer, Michael Searle, Magic: The Gathering Online : Prima's Official Strategy Guide:
- Frantic Purification can be sideboarded to destroy an enchantment, but it shouldn't be drafted unless you have no choice.
- To add sideboards to.
- 1917, The Lumber Manufacturer and Dealer - Volume 60, page 50:
- Wood used at the Natioual Guard camps will include flooring for tents. Tents will also be sideboarded for a distance of about three feet up from the ground.
- 1970, Jagman Singh, On and with the earth, page 273:
- The additional load capacity made available by sideboarding is gained by making the scraper bowl taller without increasing the bowl width.
- 2004, The North Dakota Quarterly - Volume 71, Issues 1-2, page 67:
- The Missouri, that grand, sprawling, unpredictable serpent has been sideboarded and tamed, its occasional venom squeezed for the foreseeable future from its muddy fangs.