Matching Words
31342 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Shrinkable
- adjective - capable of being shrunk; "a shrinkable fabric"
Shrinkages
- noun - process or result of becoming less or smaller; "the material lost 2 inches per yard in shrinkage"
- the act of stealing goods that are on display in a store; "shrinkage is the retail trade's euphemism for shoplifting"
- the amount by which something shrinks
Shrinkings
- noun - process or result of becoming less or smaller; "the material lost 2 inches per yard in shrinkage"
- the act of becoming less
Shrinkpack
- - same as shrink-wrap, n..
Shrinkwrap
- verb - wrap something tightly with heated plastic that shrinks upon cooling; "shrinkwrap the CDs"
Shrivel Up
- verb - wither, as with a loss of moisture; "The fruit dried and shriveled"
- wither, especially with a loss of moisture; "The fruit dried and shriveled"
Shriveling
- verb - decrease in size, range, or extent; "His earnings shrank"; "My courage shrivelled when I saw the task before me"
- wither, as with a loss of moisture; "The fruit dried and shriveled"
Shrivelled
- verb - (used especially of vegetation) having lost all moisture; "dried-up grass"; "the desert was edged with sere vegetation"; "shriveled leaves on the unwatered seedlings"; "withered vines"
- decrease in size, range, or extent; "His earnings shrank"; "My courage shrivelled when I saw the task before me"
- Dried up
- lean and wrinkled by shrinkage as from age or illness; "the old woman's shriveled skin"; "he looked shriveled and ill"; "a shrunken old man"; "a lanky scarecrow of a man with withered face and lantern jaws"-W.F.Starkie; "he did well despite his withered arm"; "a wizened little man with frizzy grey hair"
- reduced in efficacy or vitality or intensity; "our shriveled receipts during the storm"; "as the project wore on she found her enthusiasm shriveled"; "the dollar's shrunken buying power"
- wither, as with a loss of moisture; "The fruit dried and shriveled"
Shropshire
- - An English breed of black-faced hornless sheep similar to the Southdown, but larger, now extensively raised in many parts of the world.