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Definitions

slub

[sluhb] / slʌb /


Example Sentences

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A full-zip sweater for men sells for $128, while a woman’s slub turtleneck goes for $70.

From New York Times Nov. 29, 2021

Therefore, celebrate this sunny beach destination with L.A. brand Hiro Clark’s ultra-soft Tulum tee made from 100% slub cotton jersey.

From Los Angeles Times Nov. 4, 2021

Priced at $28 for two, the neutral bandannas are made of the same cotton slub jersey as the brand’s popular T-shirts.

From Los Angeles Times Aug. 6, 2020

This weft is about the equivalent of commercial slub with no tensile strength.

From A Burial Cave in Baja California The Palmer Collection, 1887 by Massey, William C.

Slub, slub, v.t. to twist after carding to prepare for spinning.

From Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 4 of 4: S-Z and supplements) by Various

Too often, as in the past, he slubbed words into what was neither poetic language nor human speech.

From Time Magazine Archive

Don't carry 'em up there, where they're liable to get slubbed.

From Si Klegg, Book 4 (of 6) Experiences Of Si And Shorty On The Great Tullahoma Campaign by McElroy, John

The slubbing is passed between the rollers in pairs, the emerging product being less in diameter than the diameter of a single slubbing.

From The Fabric of Civilization A Short Survey of the Cotton Industry in the United States by Guaranty Trust Company of New York

From the drawing frame these "slivers" go to the slubbing machines where it is lightly twisted and wound on bobbins.

From Handicraft for Girls A Tentative Course in Needlework, Basketry, Designing, Paper and Cardboard Construction, Textile Fibers and Fabrics and Home Decoration and Care by McGlauflin, Idabelle

The best plan is undoubtedly to dye the fibre after it has been carded and partly spun into what is known as slubbing or sliver.

From The Dyeing of Cotton Fabrics A Practical Handbook for the Dyer and Student by Beech, Franklin

It was beautiful to see how, forgetting himself and his sermon, he prepared to entertain, in his quaint way, this slave to the slubbing machine.

From The Bishop of Cottontown A Story of the Southern Cotton Mills by Moore, John Trotwood

In order to increase the uniformity of the roving or strand of cotton, the ends from two of the slubbing rovings are conducted together through the rollers of the machine.

From The Story of the Cotton Plant by Wilkinson, Frederick




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