|
RULED |
Lined |
|
TILED |
Ceramic-lined |
|
AVENUES |
Tree-lined roads |
|
AVENUE |
Tree-lined street |
|
|
SPANAKOPITA |
Spinach-lined Greek pastry |
|
ALAMEDA |
Poplar lined promenade |
|
BOULEVARD |
Broad tree lined avenue |
|
BUDGE |
Lined with budge; hence, scholastic. |
|
|
GEODES |
Hollow rocks with cavities lined with crystal |
|
ARBORED |
Furnished with an arbor; lined with trees. |
|
CUED |
Fed lines of dialogue while lined up, listening |
|
MISALIGN |
Put in a wrong position; not lined up correctly |
|
RIGHT-LINED |
Formed by right lines; rectilineal; as, a right-lined
angle. |
|
PILCH |
A gown or case of skin, or one trimmed or lined with fur. |
|
GEODE |
A nodule of stone, containing a cavity, lined with crystals
or mineral matter. |
|
TUBULE |
A minute tube lined with glandular epithelium; as, the
uriniferous tubules of the kidney. |
|
SUMP |
A round pit of stone, lined with clay, for receiving the
metal on its first fusion. |
|
JACKET |
A garment resembling a waistcoat lined with cork, to serve
as a life preserver; -- called also cork jacket. |
|
PELISSE |
An outer garment for men or women, originally of fur, or
lined with fur; a lady's outer garment, made of silk or other fabric. |
|
AMICE |
A hood, or cape with a hood, made of lined with gray fur,
formerly worn by the clergy; -- written also amess, amyss, and almuce. |
|
ERMINE |
By metonymy, the office or functions of a judge, whose
state robe, lined with ermine, is emblematical of purity and honor
without stain. |
|
BURSA |
Any sac or saclike cavity; especially, one of the synovial
sacs, or small spaces, often lined with synovial membrane, interposed
between tendons and bony prominences. |
|
PENDULINE |
A European titmouse (Parus, / Aegithalus, pendulinus).
It is noted for its elegant pendulous purselike nest, made of the down
of willow trees and lined with feathers. |
|
RETINA |
The delicate membrane by which the back part of the globe
of the eye is lined, and in which the fibers of the optic nerve
terminate. See Eye. |
|
BERRETTA |
A square cap worn by ecclesiastics of the Roman Catholic
Church. A cardinal's berretta is scarlet; that worn by other clerics is
black, except that a bishop's is lined with green. |