wayward weave
guide word
The guide words for a page where the word "weather" appears would typically be the first and last words listed at the top of that page in a dictionary. For example, if "weather" is on a page, the guide words might be "weave" and "wheezing," indicating that "weather" falls alphabetically between these two words. The specific guide words can vary depending on the dictionary being used.
guide word
The westward wind is a wayward wind. There's my wayward son!
Carry on my wayward son.
his wayward actions humiliated his mother.
My wayward shot in the archery final was humiliating, but luckily not fatal.
The English word "weave" did not originate from Latin. It came from Greek. The Spanish words for "weave" are "tejer" (verb) and "tejido" and "textura" (nouns), which come from Latin "texere" (to weave) and which are more closely related to the English word "texture."
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.
An 8 letter word meaning "weave out of control" is fishtail.As in "Roger did a fishtail into the wall".
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