|
GRATES |
Shreds |
|
TATTERS |
Shreds |
|
TOREAPART |
Ripped to shreds |
|
TATTERED |
Worn to shreds |
|
|
RIPUP |
Tear to shreds |
|
SHREDDY |
Consisting of shreds. |
|
NIERE |
A receptacle for rags or shreds. |
|
SHREDLESS |
Having no shreds; without a shred. |
|
|
SHREDDING |
The act of cutting or tearing into shreds. |
|
MOSLINGS |
Thin shreds of leather shaved off in dressing skins. |
|
TEASE |
To tear or separate into minute shreds, as with needles
or similar instruments. |
|
ABRASION |
A superficial excoriation, with loss of substance under
the form of small shreds. |
|
JULIENNE |
A kind of soup containing thin slices or shreds of
carrots, onions, etc. |
|
HELL |
A place into which a tailor throws his shreds, or a
printer his broken type. |
|
SQUARROSE |
Divided into shreds or jags, raised above the plane of
the leaf, and not parallel to it; said of a leaf. |
|
EXCELSIOR |
A kind of stuffing for upholstered furniture,
mattresses, etc., in which curled shreds of wood are substituted for
curled hair. |
|
FRAY |
To rub; to wear off, or wear into shreds, by rubbing; to
fret, as cloth; as, a deer is said to fray her head. |