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nubbly
nubbly, a. (ˈnʌblɪ) [f. nubble n. + -y1.] 1. Having numerous small protuberances; knobby, lumpy. (See also knubbly.) Also transf. and fig.1829 Hood in The Gem 181 A large order was sent for nubbly sofas and crooked chairs. 1844 ― Mrs. Barrage Wks. 1862 VI. 345 Her nose nubbly and red as a rosebud. 1...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Barkcloth
a famed design house for textiles and wall coverings between 1923 and 2007, called their version of this fabric rhino cloth, possibly for the rough, nubbly
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knubbly
knubbly, a. dial. (ˈnʌblɪ) [f. knubble n. + -y.] Full of or covered with ‘knubbles’ or small knobs: more usually nubbly.1858 Mayhew Upp. Rhine i. §2 (1860) 35 A queer-looking knubbly little angel. 1860 All Year Round No. 42. 363 Up and down the knubbly street. 1883 Gd. Words Nov. 711/2 The grand old...
Oxford English Dictionary
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pebbly
pebbly, a. (ˈpɛblɪ) [f. pebble n. + -y.] 1. Abounding in pebbles; covered or paved with pebbles.1600 Surflet Countrie Farme ii. xlii. 269 Hounds-toong groweth..in peblie and vntilled grounde. 1622 Drayton Poly-olb. xxvii. 4 Riuers rushing downe..Vpon their peably sholes. 1774 Pennant Tour Scot. in 1...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Bewilderment
Dwight Garner of The New York Times characterized it as a book about "ecological salvation" with a "nubbly sentimentality" but said it "is so meek, saccharine
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raspy
▪ I. raspy, a.1 (ˈrɑːspɪ, -æ-) [f. rasp v.1 + -y1.] 1. Of a rasping nature; harsh, grating.1838 Carlyle Varnhagen v. Ense, Misc. (1857) IV. 197 Such a raspy, untamed voice as that of his I have hardly heard. 1882 Blackmore Christowell xxxvi, Ungainly, nubbly, fruit it was,..raspy, to the teeth. 2. E...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Basic knitted fabrics
However, seed stitch is "nubbly", not nearly as smooth as stockinette/stocking stitch.
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scheme
▪ I. scheme, n.1 (skiːm) Forms: 7 skeme, sceme, ? sceame, 7–8 scheam, 6– scheme. [a. med.L. schēma, a. Gr. σχῆµα form, figure, f. root σχ-:—pre-Hellenic zgh-, zero-grade of Indogermanic *segh-, whence Gr. ἔχ-ειν to have, hold, be in such or such a condition. Cf. F. schéma, schème, It., Pg. schema, G...
Oxford English Dictionary
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