covered
IPA: kˈʌvɝd
adjective
- Overlaid (with) or enclosed (within something).
- (figuratively) Prepared for, or having dealt with, some matter
- (poker) Than whom another player has more money available for betting.
- (dated) Wearing one's hat.
Advertisement
Examples of "covered" in Sentences
- It is covered in shroud.
- The car is covered by snow.
- The rolling hill by the lake is covered in snow.
- The truth is to have your skin covered from the sun.
- The sky is overcast and the garden is covered in snow.
- Her hands, too, stuck out of the snow, one still covered by a pink mitten.
- "Shoppers typically pay 10 to 50 per cent of the cost of a product to insure it beyond the term covered by the manufacturer's guarantee," The Economist reports.
- Other varieties of radler-type beer imported from other countries will now have to have the word on the label covered with a sticker, Griggs said and the Express reported.
- To her, the term covered far more territory than just the big, wonderful old house on the other side of the long gravel driveway; it meant Reece and Kathleen McCaffrey, her mom and dad.
- And though the wrathful officials of the Bureau of Conscription labeled them all "deserters," the term covered great numbers who had gone home to share the sufferings of their families.
- But if something further be added whereby [the term covered by the reduplication] is attracted to the suppositum, this proposition is to be denied rather than granted, for instance were one to say: "Christ as 'this' Man is a creature."
- It must however be borne in mind that the term covered by the reduplication signifies the nature rather than the suppositum, since it is added as a predicate, which is taken formally, for it is the same to say "Christ as Man" and to say "Christ as He is a Man."
- Thus, if the husband will be careful to have the glans penis covered with the foreskin (and, of course, this can _never_ be, if the organs are united when the vulva and vagina are dry) when it enters the vagina, and will so engage in the in-and-out motion that it will _stay covered_ as the _third_ act progresses -- if this is done, when the climax comes, if the two