Scantling, measurement or prescribed size, dimensions, particularly used of timber and stone and also of vessels. In regard to timber the scantling is the thickness and breadth, the sectional dimensions; in the case of stone the dimensions of thickness, breadth and length; in shipbuilding the collective dimensions of the various parts. The word is a variation of "scantillon," a carpenter's or mason's measuring tool, also used of the measurements taken by it, and of a piece of timber of small size cut as a sample. The 0. Fr. escantillon, mod. echantillon, is usually taken to be related to Ital. scandaglio, sounding-line (Lat. scandere, to climb; cf. scansio, the metrical scansion). It was probably influenced by cantel, cantle, a small piece, a corner piece. The English form "scantling" was no 2 Cf J. A. Lundell, "Skandinavische Mundarten" (Grundriss der germanischen Philologie; 2. Aufl. 1901).
The substance of these researches was presented in a magazine, called Norvegia (1887), which employed an alphabet invented by Storm.
doubt partly due to a confusion with "scant," stinted, of short measure; this is for scamt, cf. "skimpy," "scamp" (q.v.), and is related to O.N. skammr, short, brief.