have the shape, form, costume of, dress up, smarten or adorn oneself, be dressed or clad, put on or wear Conjugation of تَزَيَّا (V, final-weak, impersonal...
(archaic) clad) (transitive) To adorn or cover with clothing; to dress; to supply clothes or clothing. to feed and clothe a family; to clothe oneself extravagantly...
[Act V, scene i]: A spirit I am indeed; But am in that dimension grossly clad Which from the womb I did participate. 1638, Thomas Herbert, Some Yeares...
clothen (transitive, intransitive, reflexive) To clothe; to put clothing on (oneself, another). (transitive, reflexive) To furnish with clothes. (transitive)...
place is quite cool. Let's stay here. (figurative, of clothes) scantily clad (pleasantly cool): 涼爽/凉爽 (liángshuǎng); (Jin) 涼哨/凉哨; (Hokkien) 秋凊 (chhiu-chhìn)...
molded plastic […] But at construction sites, we sheet-metal the sides. Cladding, it's called. Otherwise, people come along and punch holes through them...
disaster, destruction, accident Synonyms: plāga, incommodum, dētrīmentum, clādēs, interitus, perniciēs, exitium, vulnus, calamitās, incommoditās, pestis...
down, the two took long swims seaward or cruised about in Gerald's dory, clad in their swimming-suits; and Selwyn's youth became renewed in a manner almost...
Dodd, Mead & Company, 1903, →OCLC, page 421: She that has [chastity], is clad in compleat steel. A honing steel, a tool used to sharpen or hone metal blades...
went to’ds de back, ma’am.” The negro opened the door and slid his legs, clad in army O.D. and a pair of linoleum putties, to the ground. “‘I’ll go git...