fabric wad

  • 1wad|moll — wad|mal, wad|maal, wad|mol, or wad|moll «WOD muhl», noun. a coarse woolen fabric formerly worn by country people in Northern Europe. ╂[< Scandinavian (compare Old Icelandic vathmāl, probably ultimately < vāth cloth). See related etym. at… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 2wad|mol — wad|mal, wad|maal, wad|mol, or wad|moll «WOD muhl», noun. a coarse woolen fabric formerly worn by country people in Northern Europe. ╂[< Scandinavian (compare Old Icelandic vathmāl, probably ultimately < vāth cloth). See related etym. at… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 3wad|maal — wad|mal, wad|maal, wad|mol, or wad|moll «WOD muhl», noun. a coarse woolen fabric formerly worn by country people in Northern Europe. ╂[< Scandinavian (compare Old Icelandic vathmāl, probably ultimately < vāth cloth). See related etym. at… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 4wad|mal — wad|mal, wad|maal, wad|mol, or wad|moll «WOD muhl», noun. a coarse woolen fabric formerly worn by country people in Northern Europe. ╂[< Scandinavian (compare Old Icelandic vathmāl, probably ultimately < vāth cloth). See related etym. at… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 5wad — {{11}}wad (n.) early 15c., soft material for padding or stuffing, of uncertain origin, and the different meanings may represent more than one source. Among the possible connections are M.L. wadda, Du. watten, and M.E. wadmal (late 14c.) woolen… …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 6wad — I. /wɒd / (say wod) noun 1. a small mass or lump of anything soft. 2. a small mass of cotton, wool, or other fibrous or soft material, used for stuffing, padding, packing, etc. 3. a ball or mass of something squeezed together: a wad of folded… …

  • 7Washing machine — This article is about the laundry cleaning apparatus. For the Sonic Youth album, see Washing Machine (album). A typical modern front loading washing machine Irreler Bauerntradition shows an early Miele was …

    Wikipedia

  • 8stuff — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. cram, pack, jam, fill; pad, wad; plug, block; gormandize, gorge, overeat. See gluttony, expansion. n. fabric, cloth, material; nonsense; substance; rubbish. the stuff II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [Material]… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 9Diaper — Nappy redirects here. For other uses, see Nappy (disambiguation) and Diaper (disambiguation). For the geological term, see diapir. Disposable baby diaper with resealable tapes and elasticated leg cuffs …

    Wikipedia

  • 10ARCHAEOLOGY — The term archaeology is derived from the Greek words archaios ( ancient ) and logos ( knowledge, discourse ) and was already used in ancient Greek literature in reference to the study of ancient times. In its modern sense it has come to mean the… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism