Serge vs Wool - What's the difference?
serge | wool |
A type of worsted cloth.
(by metonymy) A garment made of this fabric.
(sewing) To overlock.
The hair of the sheep, llama and some other ruminants.
* 2006 , Nigel Guy Wilson, Ancient Greece , page 692
A cloth or yarn made from the wool of sheep.
* {{quote-news, 2009, January 12, Mireya Navarro, It May Market Organic Alternatives, but Is Your Cleaner Really Greener?, New York Times, url=
, passage=Spielvogel said wet cleaning also has limitations; while it is fine for cottons and fabrics worn in warm climates, he said, it can damage heavy wools or structured clothes like suit jackets. }}
Anything with a texture like that of wool.
* 1975 , Anthony Julian Huxley, Plant and Planet , page 223
A fine fiber obtained from the leaves of certain trees, such as firs and pines.
(obsolete) Short, thick hair, especially when crisped or curled.
* Shakespeare
(British, NZ) yarn (including that which is made from synthetic fibers.)
As nouns the difference between serge and wool
is that serge is a type of worsted cloth while wool is the hair of the sheep, llama and some other ruminants.As a verb serge
is to overlock.As a proper noun Wool is
a village in Dorset, England.serge
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) serge, replacing an older borrowing from (etyl) sarge < (etyl) < .Noun
Verb
(en-verb)Etymology 2
(etyl) cierge.Anagrams
*wool
English
Noun
(en-noun)- The sheep were caught and plucked, because shears had not yet been invented to cut the wool from the sheep's back.
- The groundsels have leaves covered in wool for insulation
- wool of bat and tongue of dog