0 a decorative cloth made by twisting thin thread in delicate patterns with holes in them:
lace curtains
1 a string that you use to fasten openings, especially in shoes, by putting it through two lines of small holes and tying the ends together:
3 to put the lace of a shoe or boot through its holes, or to fasten a shoe or boot by tying a lace
4 a decorative cloth that is made by weaving thin thread into delicate patterns having small spaces within them:
a lace curtain/handkerchief
The lace was taken from her wedding gown and the ribbons were ' old ' and came from her wearing apparel.
Bewilderingly, like her point lace, her story's introductory proprieties are delayed until the second paragraph.
The early lace machines were in fact developed from knitting machines, and drew on local reserves of capital, labour and technical knowledge.
Lace-making, ribbon-making, and the like were also part of this programme.
A border of lace can protect edges from unraveling or wearing down.
Of these, the single most important item was lace (1,052,460 francs), followed by silk fabric (794,508 francs) and leather gloves (585,954 francs).
While on horseback, the fair equestrian shunned the lace, frills, and furbelows worn by her pedestrian sisters.
Terms such a 'barbaric', 'primitive' and 'uncivilised' laced the forest literature of the period.
中文繁体
材料, 網眼織物, 花邊,蕾絲…
More中文简体
材料, 网眼织物, 花边,蕾丝…
MoreEspañol
encaje, cordón, encaje [masculine…
MorePortuguês
renda, cordão de sapato…
More日本語
レース(糸で編んだ透かし模様の布地), くつひも…
MoreTürk dili
dantel, dantelâ, bağcık…
MoreFrançais
dentelle [feminine], lacet [masculine], lacet…
MoreCatalan
punta, cordó…
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