List of synonyms from "wadded" to synonyms from "wafted"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms wafer, wafer chip, wadi, wade through, waffling, wading in and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
Definition of the day : « wadding »
- As in pad/padding : noun protection
- As in wad : noun ball of something
- As in filling : noun contents
- As in lining : noun interlining
- As in packing : noun material used to fill space
- As in stuffing : noun material used to pad
- As in padding : noun stuffing
- As in filling/filler : noun something that takes up
- As in jam : verb squeeze in; compress
- As in line : verb put covering inside object
- As in stuff : verb load with
- As in crumple : verb make or become wrinkled
- He was wadding his bunk with the hay, while the others looked on rather enviously.
- Extract from : « The Trail of '98 » by Robert W. Service
- Where the edges were too sharp they were beaten in by a mallet, or altered by glueing on wadding.
- Extract from : « Practical Taxidermy » by Montagu Browne
- Several times, also, she had been on fire from the wadding which came blazing on board.
- Extract from : « True Blue » by W.H.G. Kingston
- She softened: "Get me some wadding out of the middle drawer," she said.
- Extract from : « Sons and Lovers » by David Herbert Lawrence
- He flourished in the fourteenth century; according to Wadding, 1376.
- Extract from : « The Grey Friars in Oxford » by Andrew G. Little
- Wadding (VI, p. 48) cites some passages bearing on the date.
- Extract from : « The Grey Friars in Oxford » by Andrew G. Little
- Fill all the loops and bows with wadding as above mentioned.
- Extract from : « Miss Leslie's Lady's New Receipt-Book » by Eliza Leslie
- She won in a thunderstorm, Rothschild's filly, with wadding in her ears.
- Extract from : « Ulysses » by James Joyce
- Carefully he pried the wadding from each shell and poured the shot out.
- Extract from : « Trading Jeff and his Dog » by James Arthur Kjelgaard
- Wadding was a lawyer, who had thoroughly studied the whole matter.
- Extract from : « Ireland Under the Tudors, Vol. II (of 3) » by Richard Bagwell
