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Word Meanings - FELTER - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To clot or mat together like felt. His feltered locks that on his bosom fell. Fairfax.

Related words: (words related to FELTER)

  • FELTER
    To clot or mat together like felt. His feltered locks that on his bosom fell. Fairfax.
  • LOCKSMITH
    An artificer whose occupation is to make or mend locks.
  • BOSOM
    1. The breast of a human being; the part, between the arms, to which anything is pressed when embraced by them. You must prepare your bosom for his knife. Shak. 2. The breast, considered as the seat of the passions, affections, and operations of
  • BOSOMY
    Characterized by recesses or sheltered hollows.
  • TOGETHER
    togædre, togadere; to to + gador together. *29. See To, prep., and 1. In company or association with respect to place or time; as, to live together in one house; to live together in the same age; they walked together to the town. Soldiers can
  • BOSOMED
    Having, or resembling, bosom; kept in the bosom; hidden.
  • GOLDYLOCKS
    A plant of several species of the genus Chrysocoma; -- so called from the tufts of yellow flowers which terminate the stems; also, the Ranunculus auricomus, a kind of buttercup.
  • EMBOSOM
    1. To take into, or place in, the bosom; to cherish; to foster. Glad to embosom his affection. Spenser. 2. To inclose or surround; to shelter closely; to place in the midst of something. His house embosomed in the grove. Pope. Some tender flower
  • IMBOSOM
    1. To hold in the bosom; to cherish in the heart or affection; to embosom. 2. To inclose or place in the midst of; to surround or shelter; as, a house imbosomed in a grove. "Villages imbosomed soft in trees." Thomson. The Father infinite, By whom
  • BADDERLOCKS
    A large black seaweed sometimes eaten in Europe; -- also called murlins, honeyware, and henware.
  • UNBOSOM
    To disclose freely; to reveal in confidence, as secrets; to confess; -- often used reflexively; as, to unbosom one's self. Milton.
  • ALTOGETHER
    1. All together; conjointly. Altogether they wenChaucer. 2. Without exception; wholly; completely. Every man at his best state is altogether vanity. Ps. xxxix. 5.
  • GOLDILOCKS
    See GOLDYLOCKS
  • UNBOSOMER
    One who unbosoms, or discloses. "An unbosomer of secrets." Thackeray.

 

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