释义 |
[ bee-did ] / ˈbi dɪd / SEE SYNONYMS FOR beaded ON THESAURUS.COM
adjectiveornamented with or largely composed of beads: a beaded handbag. Origin of beadedFirst recorded in 1570–80; bead + -ed3 OTHER WORDS FROM beadedun·bead·ed, adjectiveWords nearby beadedbeacon status, be a credit to, bead, bead and reel, beadblast, beaded, beaded hair, beaded lizard, beader, beadeye, beadflush Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for beadedThe crown jewel of the collection is a ballgown of tulle with a beaded bodice. New York Fashion Week: Backstage at Marchesa|Isabel Wilkinson, Kevin Tachman|February 17, 2011|DAILY BEAST Some featured products, like beaded bracelets and pillow shams, evoke the Italy-India-Bali theme of the story. Inside the Eat Pray Love Merchandising Machine|Lauren Streib|August 17, 2010|DAILY BEAST Keeko, in her mannish clothes of buckskin, her beaded, fur-trimmed tunic which revealed the shapeliness of her youthful body. The Heart of Unaga|Ridgwell Cullum He bent his beaded eyes close over the sweet thing and read its first page again and again. John March, Southerner|George W. Cable
The granules of the cells corresponding to the polymorphonuclear leucocytes are rod-shaped, often beaded or with clubbed ends. The Elements of Bacteriological Technique|John William Henry Eyre And keeping firm hold of her, I took off her close-fitting fur coat, removed her beaded hat and drew her to the fire. The Confession of a Fool|August Strindberg Della lowered her beaded lashes over eyes that smarted, and raised her arms like Niobe entreating fate. Just Around the Corner|Fannie Hurst
Words related to beadeddrain, distill, snow, seep, leak, drip, hail, bleed, splash, descend, percolate, bead, precipitate, trickle, dribble, emanate, ooze, trill Medical definitions for beaded
adj.Having numerous small rounded projections often in a row. Relating to, or being a series of noncontinuous bacterial colonies along the line of inoculation in a stab culture. Of, relating to, or being stained bacteria that have more deeply stained granules occurring at regular intervals. The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. |