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Needle-women's needs
Answer for the clue "Needle-women's needs ", 7 letters:
threads
Alternative clues for the word threads
Word definitions for threads in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
" Threads " is a song by British recording artist Sarah Harding . It was released on 7 August 2015 in the United Kingdom as Harding's solo debut single. "Threads" was written by Harding with the collaboration of Julie Thompson and Ben Cullum. It is part ...
Usage examples of threads.
Thanks to this artifice, the Epeira this time obtains not a thread, but an iridescent sheet, a sort of clouded fan wherein the component threads are kept almost separate.
The whole, a graceful ovoid, hangs straight down, amid a few threads that steady it.
Guy-ropes bind it to the nearest threads and keep it stretched, especially at the mouth.
After them come interlaced threads, greater in number and finer in texture.
The youngsters stretch a few threads in swing-like curves from twig to twig.
They take up and break off one by one the threads that keep the round mat stretched on the coarse supporting network.
The threads of the silk lining afford a firm hold to the claws on every side, whether the object be to sit motionless for hours, revelling in the light and heat, or to pounce upon the passing prey.
The bustling crowd hastily scrambles up it, reaches the tip of the topmost twigs and thence sends out threads that attach themselves to every surrounding object.
Here, longer threads are produced from the rope-yard and are now left to float, anon converted into bridges by the mere contact of the free end with the neighbouring supports.
Cross Spider, on the support supplied by a few threads stretched between the nearest objects, begins by making a shallow saucer of sufficient thickness to dispense with subsequent corrections.
I clear the surrounding ground, because the bushy vegetation might easily, thanks to threads carried by the wind, divert the emigrants from the road which I have laid out for them.
The young Spiders have at their disposal the bushes, the brushwood, providing supports on every side for the threads wafted hither and thither by the eddying air-currents.
Bridges are out of the question, for the threads flung into the air are not long enough.
Thus is woven a light veil of divergent threads, a many-cornered web with the end of the branch for its summit and the edge of the table for its base, some eighteen inches wide.
This is the drought that carries the threads with it and enables the Spiders to embark upon their journey.