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Billet

Billet is a term with several related but distinct meanings in English, borrowed from Old French. In lodging and military contexts, a billet is a place of temporary lodging assigned to a person or troops; to billet someone is to provide them with housing, often in private homes or institutions. The word is used in government and military planning to describe posts or assignments.

Metalworking and manufacturing use billet to denote a semi-finished piece of metal, typically rectangular in cross-section,

Wood and timber industries use billet to mean a log or a short, thick piece cut for

In modern English, billet can also refer to a job or post, especially in government or military

Origin: from Old French billet, meaning a little note or small piece of wood; the sense relating

cast
or
extruded
for
subsequent
working
like
forging
or
extrusion.
The
term
helps
distinguish
stock
forms:
billets
are
smaller
than
blooms
but
larger
than
small
bars;
sizes
vary
by
material
and
industry.
processing
into
lumber
or
for
turning;
commonly
used
in
sawmilling
and
woodworking.
contexts:
a
diplomatic
billet
or
an
overseas
billet.
In
some
contexts,
billet
also
means
a
ticket
or
permit,
especially
in
French
usage;
in
English,
this
sense
is
narrow
and
generally
replaced
by
ticket
or
pass.
to
lodging
and
stock
material
developed
in
several
branches.