Tweedish: I don't think there's such word.
Shaggy: Untidy/Unkempt
"Tweedish" is not a recognized English word. "Shaggy" typically means having long, unkempt, and tangled hair or fur. It can also be used metaphorically to describe something that is rough or untidy in appearance.
The root word "villus" refers to a small, hair-like projection found in the intestines. It is involved in absorbing nutrients from food during digestion.
A word that has the same meaning as another word is a synonym.
Some words that contain the root word "onym" are synonym (meaning a word with a similar meaning), antonym (meaning a word with the opposite meaning), and homonym (meaning a word that sounds the same but has a different meaning).
The word "pestilence" has a root meaning plague, which comes from the Latin word "pestis" meaning plague.
The root word meaning "nerve" is "neur-" from the Greek word "neuron" meaning sinew or nerve.
It is an Australian Aboriginal word meaning 'shaggy beard'
It comes from the Latin word 'burricus' meaning small, shaggy horse
The word shaggy has two syllables. Shag-gy.
The shaggy dog ran through the yard. His shaggy mop of hair needs cutting.
The word "shaggy" is defined as something that has long unkept hair or is badly groomed. This term can also refer to a lack of thinking or clarity. "Shaggy' carpet refers to long carpet.
The term villi is the plural of the Latin word villus. It refers to the small protuberances that extend from the lining of the intestines. In Latin, villi means shaggy hair.
"Ragged" is a six-letter word that starts with an r and means tattered and shaggy.
Yak
The word shag is another word meaning "sex" It is also a bird, of the Cormorant family, so called because of its shaggy crest. There is also a hairstyle called the Shag. Also it is a type of carpet.
"Shaggy" means messy or unkempt. The word can describe the physical appearance of something with long, untidy hair or fur. In the context of describing the banyan tree in the poem, "shaggy" could imply that the tree has long, hanging roots that give it a wild or untamed appearance.
The phrase 'tubulovillous' combines two words from the ancient, classical Latin language. One is the word 'tuba', which means 'a pipe' or 'a tube'. The other is the word 'villus', which means 'shaggy hair'. The English meaning therefore is having tube-shaped, shaggy tufts of hair. In English, the word 'villous' refers to being covered with, or like, villi, which help in absorbing digested food, or in passing nourishment to the embryo.
Shaggy means like for example shaggy as in shaggy dog, like a really long haired, "shaggy dog". Understand now....if you don't to bad, but if you do good for you.