layup

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See also: lay-up, and lay up

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From lay +‎ up.

Noun

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layup (plural layups)

  1. (basketball) A close-range shot in which the shooter banks the ball off the backboard from a few feet away.
  2. (colloquial) A relatively easy task.
    Meeting the numbers will be a layup, if not a slam dunk.
  3. The state of being laid up.
    The ship endured an interminable layup in the harbor lasting nearly a month.
  4. (rail transport, countable or uncountable) A track used to store train cars.
    The caboose, long decrepit, rested on a forgotten layup just north of the dry riverbed.
    • 2005, Julia Solis, New York Underground: The Anatomy of a City, New York City: Routledge, →ISBN, page 83:
      The City Hall station on the BMT line [...] has a lower level that was never put into service. Yet the platforms have been maintained, are well illuminated, and serve as a layup and storage area for the MTA.
  5. (rail transport) A train car sitting in storage (laid up), often overnight.
    Though I knew we shouldn't be there, she pulled me out of the tunnel and into the dark layup, its floors still grubby from the morning commute many hours ago.
    • 2010, Michele Carlo, Fish Out of Agua: My Life on Neither Side of the (Subway) Tracks, New York City: Citadel Press, →ISBN, page 88:
      A nonmoving empty train, or a layup, was easiest to pin down at night or on weekends when trains would park on the dormant stretches of express tracks.
  6. (materials science) The process of applying alternate layers of a material and a binding agent to form a composite material.
    Forgetting to clear the sawdust around his workshop, Payton ended up contaminating the resin-ply matrix with wood particles during his hand layup.
    • 2015, Fong, T. C., Saba, N., Liew, C. K., De Silva, R., Enamul Hoque, M., Goh, K. L., “Yarn Flax Fibres for Polymer-Coated Sutures and Hand Layup Polymer Composite Laminates”, in Salit, M., Jawaid, M., Yusoff, N., Hoque, M., editors, Manufacturing of Natural Fibre Reinforced Polymer Composites, Cham: Springer, →DOI, →ISBN, page 155:
      In addition to employing flax fibres for polymer-coated sutures, more recently, flax fibres have been proposed for reinforcing polymer composites, such as hand layup laminated scaffolds in tissue engineering.
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