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Word Meanings - FILOSELLE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

A kind of silk thread less glossy than floss, and spun from coarser material. It is much used in embroidery instead of floss.

Related words: (words related to FILOSELLE)

  • FLOSSIFICATION
    A flowering; florification. Craig.
  • MATERIALNESS
    The state of being material.
  • THREAD
    wire, thread, OHG. drat, Icel. a thread, Sw. tråd, Dan. traad, and 1. A very small twist of flax, wool, cotton, silk, or other fibrous substance, drawn out to considerable length; a compound cord consisting of two or more single yarns doubled,
  • INSTEAD
    1. In the place or room; -- usually followed by of. Let thistles grow of wheat. Job xxxi. 40. Absalom made Amasa captain of the host instead of Joab. 2 Sam. xvii.
  • THREADFISH
    The cutlass fish. A carangoid fish having the anterior rays of the soft dorsal and anal fins prolonged in the form of long threads.
  • THREADER
    1. A device for assisting in threading a needle. 2. A tool or machine for forming a thread on a screw or in a nut.
  • THREADFIN
    Any one of several species of fishes belonging to Polynemus and allied genera. They have numerous long pectoral filaments.
  • MATERIALISTIC; MATERIALISTICAL
    Of or pertaining to materialism or materialists; of the nature of materialism. But to me his very spiritualism seemed more materialistic than his physics. C. Kingsley.
  • EMBROIDERY
    1. Needlework used to enrich textile fabrics, leather, etc.; also, the art of embroidering. 2. Diversified ornaments, especially by contrasted figures and colors; variegated decoration. Fields in spring's embroidery are dressed. Addison. A mere
  • GLOSSY
    1. Smooth and shining; reflecting luster from a smooth surface; highly polished; lustrous; as, glossy silk; a glossy surface. 2. Smooth; specious; plausible; as, glossy deceit.
  • THREADBARENESS
    The state of being threadbare.
  • FLOSS
    The slender styles of the pistillate flowers of maize; also called silk. 2. Untwisted filaments of silk, used in embroidering. Floss silk, silk that has been twisted, and which retains its loose and downy character. It is much used in embroidery.
  • THREAD-SHAPED
    Having the form of a thread; filiform.
  • THREADY
    1. Like thread or filaments; slender; as, the thready roots of a shrub. 2. Containing, or consisting of, thread.
  • MATERIALISM
    1. The doctrine of materialists; materialistic views and tenets. The irregular fears of a future state had been supplanted by the materialism of Epicurus. Buckminster. 2. The tendency to give undue importance to material interests; devotion to
  • MATERIALIZATION
    The act of materializing, or the state of being materialized.
  • MATERIALIST
    1. One who denies the existence of spiritual substances or agents, and maintains that spiritual phenomena, so called, are the result of some peculiar organization of matter. 2. One who holds to the existence of matter, as distinguished from the
  • MATERIALITY
    1. The quality or state of being material; material existence; corporeity. 2. Importance; as, the materiality of facts.
  • THREADWORM
    Any long, slender nematode worm, especially the pinworm and filaria.
  • MATERIALLY
    1. In the state of matter. I do not mean that anything is separable from a body by fire that was not materially preëxistent in it. Boyle. 2. In its essence; substantially. An ill intention is certainly sufficient to spoil . . . an act in itself
  • IMMATERIALIST
    One who believes in or professes, immaterialism.
  • DOUBLETHREADED
    Having two screw threads instead of one; -- said of a screw in which the pitch is equal to twice the distance between the centers of adjacent threads. (more info) 1. Consisting of two threads twisted together; using two threads.
  • IMMATERIAL
    1. Not consisting of matter; incorporeal; spiritual; disembodied. Angels are spirits immaterial and intellectual. Hooker. 2. Of no substantial consequence; without weight or significance; unimportant; as, it is wholly immaterial whether he does
  • DEMATERIALIZE
    To deprive of material or physical qualities or characteristics. Dematerializing matter by stripping if of everything which . . . has distinguished matter. Milman.
  • IMMATERIALLY
    1. In an immaterial manner; without matter or corporeal substance. 2. In an unimportant manner or degree.
  • COMMATERIAL
    Consisting of the same material. Bacon.
  • SUPERMATERIAL
    Being above, or superior to, matter.
  • UNMATERIAL
    Not material; immaterial. Daniel.

 

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