The AI-powered English dictionary
plural kerfs
(now rare) The act of cutting or carving something; a stroke or slice.
The groove or slit created by cutting or sawing something; an incision. quotations examples
They pass through a cleft that has been made across a low range of hills, like a kerf in the top of a log, and enter into a lovely territory of subtly swelling emerald green fields strewn randomly with small white capsules that he takes to be sheep.
1999, Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon
The portion or quantity (e.g. of wood, hay, turf, wool, etc.) removed or cut off in a given stroke. quotations examples
Sawing with a thin-kerf blade produces a kerf that's 1/2 to 1/3 the size of a standard blade kerf.
1991, Popular Mechanics, January issue, page 63, "Thin-kerf blades", by Rosario Capotostro
The distance between diverging saw teeth. quotations examples
The flattened, cut-off end of a branch or tree; a stump or sawn-off cross-section. quotations examples
Sebastian, still not alone, is seated on the white-and-cinder-grey trunk of a felled tree. […] A Camberwell Beauty skims past and settles on the kerf, fanning its velvety wings.
1941, Vladimir Nabokov, The Real Life of Sebastian Knight, Penguin 1971 edition, page 115
third-person singular simple present kerfs, present participle kerfing, simple past and past participle kerfed
To cut a piece of wood or other material with several kerfs to allow it to be bent. examples