Matching Words
1682 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Triced
- verb - hoist up or in and lash or secure with a small rope
- raise with a line; "trice a window shade"
Trifid
- adjective - divided into three lobes; "trifid petals"
Tripod
- noun - a three-legged rack used for support
Tucked
- verb - draw together into folds or puckers
- fit snugly into; "insert your ticket into the slot"; "tuck your shirttail in"
- having tucked or being tucked; "tightly tucked blankets"; "a fancy tucked shirt"
- make a tuck or several folds in; "tuck the fabric"; "tuck in the sheet"
Tufted
- adjective - (of a bird or animal) having a usually ornamental tuft or process on the head; often used in combination; "golden crested"; "crested iris"; "crested oriole"; "tufted duck"; "tufted loosestrife"
- (of plants) growing in small dense clumps or tufts
- having or adorned with tufts; "a tufted bedspread"
Tugged
- verb - carry with difficulty; "You'll have to lug this suitcase"
- move by pulling hard; "The horse finally tugged the cart out of the mud"
- pull hard; "The prisoner tugged at the chains"; "This movie tugs at the heart strings"
- pull or strain hard at; "Each oar was tugged by several men"
- strive and make an effort to reach a goal; "She tugged for years to make a decent living"; "We have to push a little to make the deadline!"; "She is driving away at her doctoral thesis"
- struggle in opposition; "She tugged and wrestled with her conflicts"
- tow (a vessel) with a tug; "The tugboat tugged the freighter into the harbor"
Turbid
- adjective - (of liquids) clouded as with sediment; "a cloudy liquid"; "muddy coffee"; "murky waters"
Turfed
- verb - cover (the ground) with a surface layer of grass or grass roots
Turgid
- adjective - abnormally distended especially by fluids or gas; "hungry children with bloated stomachs"; "he had a grossly distended stomach"; "eyes with puffed (or puffy) lids"; "swollen hands"; "tumescent tissue"; "puffy tumid flesh"
- ostentatiously lofty in style; "a man given to large talk"; "tumid political prose"