Blankets were originally made from undyed wool, and so were white.
Their name comes fromn the French word for white - blanc.
as soft as a blanket
The smog was a gray blanket over the city. The blanket was made of wool from the farm's sheep.
The verb 'feels' is a linking verb (blanket = scratchy); and the word scratchy is a predicate adjective.
The word fell is superfluous in that sentence. I would say, the snow covered the fields like a blanket.
There are three syllables. Blan-ket-ed.
Thomas Blanqutte (blanket) was an englishman who weaved the patern for the blanket in the 14th century. also from the French word blanc.
My blanket is very soft. I have a nice blanket. You can't have my blanket.
It came from Greece Plaid is a Gaelic word meaning 'blanket or mantle' and of unknown origin.
as soft as a blanket
No, it is not a preposition. The word blanket can be a verb (to cover) or a noun, which may be used as an adjunct or adjective (blanket coverage, blanket policy).
The word blanket is accented on the first syllable. (blang-kit)
There's no special word for receiving blanket in Hebrew. It would just be a blanket or smikha (שמיכה)
The smog was a gray blanket over the city. The blanket was made of wool from the farm's sheep.
kambal.
Words that describe blanket are called adjectives. Adjectives provide information about the blanket. Perhaps it's a softblanket, it could be a dirty blanket, maybe even a smelly blanket.
blanket
A blanket term is a word of phrase used to describe multiple groups of different things.