NO! we weave Navajo rugs! taught to us by Spider Woman. Our original and first weaver.
A spider
The make up of a proper weaver is wood. Generally a weaver is a loom, and people are able to weave different materials on them. Wood makes the loom very study.
rugs, cloth, clothes, maps, blankets, baskets, and many other things as well
Athena is the better weaver, but only because she is a god. If Athena had been mortal, (human), Arachne would have probably won the weave-off that the two had.
weavers usually take bamboo and other various grasses and use a sort or patters and weave the grass in and out of itself. weavers usually make baskets or carrying items.
No, the word weaver is a noun, a singular, common noun; a word for a person or animal who weaves; a word for a person or a thing.The verb form is weave (weaves, weaving, wove, woven).
The word 'weave' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'weave' is a word for the pattern that is formed when something is woven; a word for a hairstyle created by weaving pieces of real or artificial hair into a person's existing hair; a word for a thing.Examples:The weave of this fabric is perfect for draperies. (noun)She has a very expensive hair weave. (noun)The colors they weave into the rugs identify their families. (verb)His stories weave some real life experiences into the fiction. (verb)The noun forms of the verb to weave are weaver and the gerund, weaving.
Allowing a single weaver to to weave much wider fabrics, the flying shuttle was patented by John Kay in 1733.
"we've" is an abbreviation of "we have", so you would use it where you would use "we have". ------- We've bitten off more than we can chew in redesigning the garden. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "weave" is a word relating to fabric or strands, a "weaver" is someone who "weaves" cloth and when you are examining the cloth you could admire its "weave". ------- I just got purple weave in my hair.
14th century Bristol, England: Flemish weaver Thomas Blanquette pioneered a heavily napped woolen weave... and the rest... is history.
occupational name for a weaver, Middle High German wëber, German Weber, an agent derivative of weben 'to weave'.