I have tried to answer this question but there isn't enough space to write it.
frustrating to me
Scaffold, or scaffolding is the temporary stick/pipe structures erected outside buildings undedr construction or renovation. They're used to give construction workers access to the facade during work. And a scaffold builder is the guy who puts them up.
Yes, it probably is but it is much easier doing it from a kit. Unlike traditional scaffold systems a scaffold tower can be erected safely and quickly by just one person. The kits are almost fool proof to put together which keeps assembly time and errors to an absolute minimum.
Raking leaves is the proper English phrase to use.
Scaffold
Raking the Ashes was created in 2005.
scaffold is a noun so there is no antonym.
1.Cantilever scaffold 2.Suspended scaffold 3.Single pole scaffold
The Linear Scaffold was created in 1997.
No the word raking is not a noun. It is the present participle of the verb rake.
Someone trained in scaffold inspection.
rule of thumb; 1m3 of scaffold = 30kg 1tonnes = 1,000kg for 1 tonnes of scaffold : (1,000 / 30) = 33.3333m3 Answer; approx. 33m3 (cubic meter) of scaffold for 1 tonnes.
A scaffold that is supported by tube and fit fixed to a solid structure