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Flaw
Answer for the clue "Flaw ", 7 letters:
blemish
Alternative clues for the word blemish
Word definitions for blemish in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
early 14c., "to hurt, damage," from Old French blemiss- "to turn pale," extended stem of blemir, blesmir "to make pale; stain, discolor," also "to injure" (13c., Modern French blĂȘmir ), probably from Frankish *blesmjan "to cause to turn pale," or some other ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Blemish may refer to: A minor imperfection. For skin imperfection, see Acne vulgaris Blemish (album) , a music album from David Sylvian released in 2003
Usage examples of blemish.
He was furred like one of the improbable animals in the bestiary, but there was no blemish on his chest.
The teenager looked, pointing to a circular blemish on the feather-edge timber wall of the barn.
She reached up boldly and touched his cheek where the blemish stained his skin, then flushed and pulled her hand away.
Ideas had their moment in the sun, and if the glare revealed a blemish, they were banished.
There was a blemish in the execution of the song, but to Alonzo it seemed an added charm instead of a defect.
This blemish consisted of a marked flatting of the third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh notes of the refrain or chorus of the piece.
There was not a blemish anywhere on her skin, save a few bruises on her upper arms acquired, she said, from other inmates trying to steal her satins.
Neither of you has so much as a single blemish -- unless constantly leaking breasts should be so considered!
Her complexion took the brunt of that brilliance and revealed not a single blemish or flaw.
Remember, many of those Eastern peoples regard body hair as a blemish on either sex.
I could be sorry for cripples, but I would never believe that giving a blemish a noble name made it either an ornament or a noble blemish.
Except for the little crescent scar on her throat, she bore not a blemish, which was not true of the noble maidens she attended.
He had erased the blemish completely and then faintly shaded the area so that it looked like the rest of her skin.
Grace had no mole or blemish anywhere on her body, but the thought of being pawed and peered at by this obscene crew filled her with revulsion.
Americans had their blemishes, particularly a curious kind of practical self-righteousness, but at least they did not brim with the world-weariness Europeans often equated with cultural maturity.