It mean's it has a zip or lost a zip,
The zip is the line in the middle of the feather.
UnZipped mean's it has no line in the middle,
Look we have found a rare UnZipped feather.
yes it is like say i said i unzipped my jacket
"feather in the wind" - can you say that in English? And what does it mean?
Your friends have attitudes similar to yours. It is a criticism.
His pants were not unzipped in the music video. He forgot to zip them in a concert...but its not like he meant to. He didn't say, hey I want to have my pants unzipped today...it was on accident and it was a concert, not the black and white video. Yes, he was wearing the same pants inn both...
The Algonquin (Algonkin) word for a feather is mikwan(plural mikwanak); a small feather is mikwannens.The Ojibwe word for feather is miigwan, showing the very close relationship between these two languages.
A quill was a pen made from the feather of a large bird. To say "Pick up your quill" means start writing.
federbal (feather ball of English words)
singular: die Feder plural: die Federn
How it is as light as a feather and as hard a dragon scales
d0 (two) pankh (feather) answer is "do pankh"
Apart from finding the feather, it means nothing at all. Not all naturally occurring phenomenon are to be interpreted as omens. Finding a black and white feather is one such occurrence. Unless the feather is from a bird with specific importance to you personally, I would say it is just a lovely bit of nature and bringing it home will if nothing else make you smile and perhaps remind you of the day you found it. It realy depends on how *you* feel about it, and what lead up to discovering the feather. In many Native American tribes a feather of any kind is a message. Many are found after you pettion for an answer, or pray. It is seen as a sign of your prayer or pettion being heard.
You would say "sombrero con pluma de gallo".