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jacal

 
Dictionary: ja·cal
(hä-käl') pronunciation
n., pl., -ca·les (-kä'lās), or -cals.
A thatch-roofed hut made of wattle and daub found in Mexico and the southwest United States.

[American Spanish, from Nahuatl xahcalli : xamitl, xam-, xah-, adobe + calli, house.]


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Architecture: jacal
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1. A rectangular structure, either partially enclosed or open on all four sides, used as a temporary storage place, such as for grain; usually a flat roof supported by two to four posts on each side of the structure (depending on its size) and often covered with a layer of adobe mud or straw.
2. In the American Southwest, a crude house having walls built of closely spaced upright sticks, or poles driven into the ground, and small branches interwoven between them; then covered with mud or an adobe clay; usually plastered to provide additional weather protection; a flat roof is supported by horizontal logs and then covered with thatching, often with a layer of adobe atop the thatching.
3. Same as wigwam.



[Ma]

American term used in southwestern parts of the US for the wattle and daub construction of walls.

Word Tutor: jacal
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: Noun- A crude house or hut with a thatched roof and walls made of upright poles or sticks covered and chinked with mud or clay.

Tutor's tip: This word was used in the 2006 Scripps National Spelling Bee finals.

Wikipedia: Jacal
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The jacal is an adobe style housing structure historically found throughout parts of the south-western United States and Mexico. The structure was employed by Native people of the Americans prior to European colonization and was later employed by both Hispanic and Anglo settlers in Texas and elsewhere [1].

Typically, a jacal would consist of slim close-set poles tied together and filled out with mud, clay and grasses. More sophisticated structures, such as those constructed by the Anasazi, incorporated adobe bricks—sun-baked mud and sandstone.

Jacal construction is similar to wattle and daub. However, the "wattle" portion of jacal structures consists mainly of vertical poles lashed together with cordage and sometimes supported by a pole framework, as in the pithouses of the Basketmaker III period of the Ancestral Puebloan (aka Anasazi) Indians of the American Southwest. This is overlain with a layer of mud/adobe (the "daub), sometimes applied over a middle layer of dry grasses or brush which functions as insulation.

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tapeista
wattle-and-daub
shack

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Architecture. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Archaeology Dictionary. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Archaeology. Copyright © 2002, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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