You tear the old roof off with one of those shovel looking thing that have teeth on the end. Remove the old felt paper and the nails and chingles. Then inspect the decking. Replace any decking that is rotten. Then put down new felt and flashing and replace shingles. Good luck.
Tear. As in I will tear that paper. Not the tear that involves crying.
Due to the way paper is made, its fibers tend to run in one direction. If you tear in that direction, along the fibers, the paper tears easily, and the fibers guide the tear to be straight across. If you tear the paper across the fibers, all of the above is untrue.
Tear, as in to tear some paper, has the past tense of tore.
"Ver-tear": "Ver" as in "very" and "tear" as in "tear the paper up"
the paper will become wet and will tear.
Sure! An example of a homograph is "bow". In this sentence, "She used a bow to tie the ribbon on the gift."
The paper will tear before the joint will fail.
torn as in tear paper? Its torn...
It means ' tear's rainbow'. Tear as in crying, not the one breaking a piece of paper, etc.
That probably refers to the layer of roofing felt(paper) that lies between the roof sheathing(plywood) and the shingles..a fallen limb could tear thru that "membrane" and rain could become an issue
The verb is spelled tear. "I'm going to tear my shed down."The same verb is used if you tear paper, or tear your pants.