1. wedging - Noun
2. wedging - Verb
of Wedge
Source: Webster's dictionaryFor each element you’re creating, you have to call the exposure out, which you had to figure out, which was called wedging, where we’d do a whole exposure chart, from dark to light, two-and-a-half stops one way or another. Source: Internet
During his return trip to the Main Base he fell through the lid of a crevasse, and was saved only by his sledge wedging itself into the ice above him. Source: Internet
This form of weathering causes convex and relatively thin sheets of rock to slough off the exposed surfaces of batholiths (a process accelerated by frost wedging ). Source: Internet
She had hoped that they would go back to sleep, but the man in the house directly to the south began to make a terrible hullabaloo of hammering, wedging, ripping, and splitting. Source: Internet