Glossary entry

French term or phrase:

au droit paillasse

English translation:

(sink unit) splashback

Added to glossary by Maria Constant (X)
Oct 28, 2012 09:17
11 yrs ago
1 viewer *
French term

au droit paillasse

French to English Tech/Engineering Construction / Civil Engineering Description of the walls in a first-aid room in a museum
PRESCRIPTIONS RELATIVES AUX FINITIONS :
Sol : carrelage, plinthe à gorge

Murs : faïence au droit paillasse
faïence ou peinture lessivable ailleurs

Plafonds : hydrofuges

I understand the ceramic tiles on the walls but I'm stuck with "au droit paillasse".

TIA
Proposed translations (English)
4 (sink unit) splashback
Change log

Oct 28, 2012 09:45: Tony M changed "Field (specific)" from "Architecture" to "Construction / Civil Engineering"

Oct 29, 2012 08:13: Catharine Cellier-Smart changed "Level" from "Non-PRO" to "PRO"

Nov 2, 2012 06:38: Maria Constant (X) Created KOG entry

Votes to reclassify question as PRO/non-PRO:

PRO (3): Yolanda Broad, Sandra & Kenneth Grossman, Catharine Cellier-Smart

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Proposed translations

27 mins
Selected

(sink unit) splashback

'au droit' means 'level with / in line with' etc.

'paillasse' is the word for the draining board of a sink, and hence by extension, I'd say the whole sink unit.

Both these terms readily found in a good dictionary.

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Note added at 29 mins (2012-10-28 09:46:54 GMT)
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Logically, you would fit a tiled splashback in the area where water is most likely to abound; the rest of the walls could tolerate being simply painted.

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Note added at 30 mins (2012-10-28 09:48:04 GMT)
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Note that a splashback is often of limited height, whereas the s:t does not specify this, implying possibly that the tiling should go right up to the ceiling. IMHO, it's not very well written for a specification!

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Note added at 43 mins (2012-10-28 10:01:13 GMT)
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Why? 'faïence' is just ceramic tiles, and it's usual enough to have tiling round a sink, isn't it? If that was the real issue, it might have been wise to include that in the explanation to your question, in order to get better-targeted answers.
Note from asker:
Thanks Tony for your feedback. As indeed you mentioned in your first post I'd found draining board / Lab table for paillasse but it was the faïence part that was troubling me.
Sorry Tony for not being clearer. As I mentioned in the question I know faïence was referring to ceramic tiles but somehow I couldn't see where the "au droit de" fitted in with the tiles. Anyway all clear now. Thanks for your input.
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thanks Tony."
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