|
IRONED |
Pressed |
|
PLEAT |
Pressed fold |
|
FRAUD |
Pressed fold |
|
CONSTRICTED |
Pressed together |
|
|
SQUEEZED |
Pressed firmly, crushed |
|
PANICBUTTON |
Thing pressed in an emergency |
|
KNEADED |
Speaker needed to be pressed |
|
SERRIED |
Crowded; compact; dense; pressed together. |
|
|
REDSTREAK |
Cider pressed from redstreak apples. |
|
COMPACTED |
Compact; pressed close; concentrated; firmly united. |
|
PLUG |
A flat oblong cake of pressed tobacco. |
|
NECESSITOUS |
Very needy or indigent; pressed with poverty. |
|
STUFF |
To fill by being pressed or packed into. |
|
CHESSEL |
The wooden mold in which cheese is pressed. |
|
HOTPRESSED |
Pressed while heat is applied. See Hotpress, v. t. |
|
PREENED |
Firstly pressed, finally sheened, and kept feathers in good order |
|
COMPRESSED |
Pressed together; compacted; reduced in volume by
pressure. |
|
CAVENDISH |
Leaf tobacco softened, sweetened, and pressed into plugs
or cakes. |
|
DEPRESSED |
Pressed or forced down; lowed; sunk; dejected;
dispirited; sad; humbled. |
|
PRESS |
To straiten; to distress; as, to be pressed with want or
hunger. |
|
IMPACKMENT |
The state of being closely surrounded, crowded, or
pressed, as by ice. |
|
SILKY |
Covered with soft hairs pressed close to the surface,
as a leaf; sericeous. |
|
BIFFIN |
A baked apple pressed down into a flat, round cake; a dried
apple. |
|
ABACK |
Backward against the mast; -- said of the sails when
pressed by the wind. |
|
SERICEOUS |
Covered with very soft hairs pressed close to the
surface; as, a sericeous leaf. |