Girdle vs Ungirdled - What's the difference?
girdle | ungirdled |
That which girds, encircles, or encloses; a circumference
* Shakespeare
A belt or elasticated corset; especially, a belt, sash, or article of dress encircling the body usually at the waist, often used to support stockings or hosiery.
* Bible, Revelations xv. 6
The zodiac; also, the equator.
* Campbell
* Cowper
The line of greatest circumference of a diamond, at which it is grasped by the setting.
(mining) A thin bed or stratum of stone.
The clitellum of an earthworm.
(Scottish, Northern English)
To gird, encircle, or constrain by such means.
To kill or stunt a tree by removing or inverting a ring of bark.
Without a girdle.
*{{quote-news, year=2008, date=June 10, author=Dave Kehr, title=New DVDs: Deneuve and Loren Still Haunt the Screen, work=New York Times
, passage=In a single traveling shot, held an outrageously long time, De Sica simply records the astounding sight of an ungirdled Ms. Loren, playing a Neapolitan pizza-maker, as she walks the length of a crowded street, moving in ways that definitely do not bring marble to mind. }}
As a noun girdle
is that which girds, encircles, or encloses; a circumference.As a verb girdle
is to gird, encircle, or constrain by such means.As an adjective ungirdled is
without a girdle.girdle
English
Noun
(en noun)- within the girdle of these walls
- their breasts girded with golden girdles
- that gems the starry girdle of the year
- from the world's girdle to the frozen pole
- (Francis Bacon)
- (Knight)
- (Raymond)
Verb
(girdl)Anagrams
* * *ungirdled
English
Adjective
(-)citation