English Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">texturizing</span> <span class="searchmatch">shears</span> Wikipedia <span class="searchmatch">texturizing</span> <span class="searchmatch">shears</span> pl (plural only) (UK) A type of <span class="searchmatch">shears</span> used in hairstyling. One edge is...
Rhymes: -ɪzə(ɹ)z <span class="searchmatch">texturizing</span> scissors pl (plural only) (US) Synonym of <span class="searchmatch">texturizing</span> <span class="searchmatch">shears</span> (UK)...
shears pruning shears purchase <span class="searchmatch">shears</span> <span class="searchmatch">texturizing</span> <span class="searchmatch">shears</span> trauma <span class="searchmatch">shears</span> tool consisting of two blades with bevel edges <span class="searchmatch">shears</span> third-person singular simple...
continuative form”) of the verb すく (“to comb”).”) + 鋏(はさみ) (hasami, “scissors”). IPA(key): [sɨkʲiba̠sa̠mʲi] すきばさみ or すきバサミ • (sukibasami) <span class="searchmatch">texturizing</span> <span class="searchmatch">shears</span>...
【すきばさみ】 [noun] <span class="searchmatch">texturizing</span> <span class="searchmatch">shears</span> Alternative spelling 梳き鋏...
steel (countable and uncountable, plural shear steels) A steel suitable for <span class="searchmatch">shears</span>, scythes, and other cutting instruments, prepared from fagots of blistered...
cut”). Partially displaced native Old English sċēara (“scissors, <span class="searchmatch">shears</span>”), whence <span class="searchmatch">shears</span>. Doublet of chisel. The current spelling, from the 16th century...
originally with a sword or other bladed weapon, now usually with <span class="searchmatch">shears</span>, or as if using <span class="searchmatch">shears</span>. 1819, Walter Scott, Ivanhoe: So trenchant was the Templar’s...
Wilson, Ancient Greece, page 692: The sheep were caught and plucked, because <span class="searchmatch">shears</span> had not yet been invented to cut the wool from the sheep's back. A cloth...
now vanished, the Parcæ closed the abrupt woof, and lifted the impending <span class="searchmatch">shears</span>. 1866, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, “The Wife of Miletus”, in The Lost Tales of...