serge
IPA: sˈɝdʒ
noun
- (textiles) A type of worsted cloth.
- (by metonymy) A garment made of this fabric.
- A large wax candle used in some church ceremonies.
verb
- (sewing) To overlock.
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Examples of "serge" in Sentences
- Serge is then sent to a borstal.
- Hi there Serge and welcome to en iki.
- Let's move it back to Serge Diaghilev.
- Cole has a meeting with Serge and Asher.
- Serge wanted it to get at least a month.
- Serge Issakov, you are missing the point.
- Serge has already made that presentation.
- Serge enjoys adventure with a carefree attitude.
- Serge oodzing is very difficult to communicate with.
- Many chronobiologists will envy Serge for this prize.
- My dress wuz a cream buntin ', lak what dey calls serge dese days.
- In no way your argument 'troop serge' is working, is any good for that poor country.
- The pen had signed some important treaty, and the serge was a fragment of a flag that had been borne triumphant from a field where a nation's destinies had been sealed.
- Just think, in 500 years' time it could be part of the global language, like the cloth originally known as serge de Nimes, which makes up over 90 percent of the world's jeans.
- The women card, the children spin, the men weave; and each cottage is a little manufactory of drugget and serge, which is taken to market in spring, and sold in the low-country towns.
- Of course, considering the shortness of the time, it would be impossible: yet it seems odd, out of keeping, that she should still be wearing that soft blue serge, which is associated with so many happy hours.
- Then her beautiful locks are submitted to the tonsure; and to signify her deadness forever to the world, she is clothed in a dress of coarse grey cloth, called serge, in which she is to pass the miserable remnant of her days.
- There is alsoe a square Court with Penthouses round where the Malters are wth Mault and oat meal, but the serge is the Chief manufacture, There is a prodigious quantety of their serges they never bring into the market but are in hired roomes wch are noted for it, for it would be impossible to have it altogether.
- The swing-door creaked, and in the doorway appeared a rather short young Jew with a big beak-like nose, with a bald patch surrounded by rough red curly hair; he was dressed in a short and very shabby reefer jacket, with rounded lappets and short sleeves, and in short serge trousers, so that he looked skimpy and short-tailed like an unfledged bird.
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