What is another word for woolen?

Pronunciation: [wˈʊlən] (IPA)

Wool is a popular material that's used for a variety of clothing and textile products. The term "woolen" is often used to describe items made from wool fibers, but there are other words that can be used to describe this type of fabric. Synonyms for woolen include "felted," "hairy," "fleece," "knitted," "woven," "textured," and "napped." Additionally, wool can be categorized by its fineness and softness, with terms like "coarse," "medium," and "fine" frequently used to differentiate between different wool types. Regardless of how you describe woolen fabrics, their warmth, durability, and versatility make them a popular choice for clothing and home decor alike.

Synonyms for Woolen:

What are the hypernyms for Woolen?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Woolen

These articles had much to do with the establishment of the first woolen mills in the State of Oregon.
"Memoirs of Orange Jacobs"
Orange Jacobs
Cushion-Kate followed the bier with her red kerchief tied under her chin, and pulled far down over her forehead, so that her face could scarcely be seen; and reaching from her shoulders to her feet hung the large black woolen cloak which the borough furnished to mourners.
"Landolin"
Berthold Auerbach
She was about ten years of age, and wore a cheap woolen hood tied close to her face, and a red shawl crossed over her chest and knotted behind her back.
"The Other Fellow"
F. Hopkinson Smith

Famous quotes with Woolen

  • So to sleep on the sleeping porch required preparation. First, you put on long underwear, pajamas, jeans, a sweatshirt, your grandfather’s old cardigan and bathrobe, two pairs of woolen socks on your feet and another on your hands, and a hat with earflaps tied beneath the chin.Then you climbed into bed and were immediately covered with a dozen bed blankets, three horse blankets, all the household overcoats, a canvas tarpaulin, and a piece of old carpet. I’m not sure that they didn’t lay an old wardrobe on top of that, just to hold everything down. It was like sleeping under a dead horse. For the first minute or so it was unimaginably cold, shockingly cold, but gradually your body heat seeped in and you became warm and happy in a way you would not have believed possible only a minute or two before. It was bliss. Or at least it was until you moved a muscle. The warmth, you discovered, extended only to the edge of your skin and not a micron farther. There wasn’t any possibility of shifting positions. If you so much as flexed a finger or bent a knee, it was like plunging them into liquid nitrogen.
    Bill Bryson
  • It has been remarked by foreigners that the English are particularly fond of bell-ringing; and indeed most of our churches have a ring of bells in the steeple, partly appropriated to that purpose. These bells are rung upon most occasions of joy and festivity, and sometimes at funerals, when they are muffled, and especially at the funerals of ringers, with a piece of woolen cloth bound about the clapper, and the sounds then emitted by them are exceedingly unmelodious, and well fitted to inspire the mind with melancholy… Ringing the bells backwards is sometimes mentioned, and probably consisted in beginning with the largest bell and ending with the least; it appears to have been practiced by the ringers as a mark of contempt or disgust.
    Joseph Strutt
  • Simonson, in rubber jacket and similar galoshes, bound with whip-cord over woolen socks (he was a vegetarian and did not use the skin of animals), was also awaiting the departure of the party. He stood near the entrance of the house, writing down in a note-book a thought that occurred to him. “If,” he wrote, “a bacterium were to observe and analyze the nail of a man, it would declare him an inorganic being. Similarly, from an observation of the earth’s surface, we declare it to be inorganic. That is wrong.”
    Leo Tolstoy
  • The hopes of the woolen industry are threadbare.
    Philip K. Dick
  • The desire for security, very marked in women, draws the weaker among them to men who, by their strength or ability, seem to offer protection and support. In time of war they count a warrior's scalps; in time of peace they hunt for genius or wealth. To the man in love the giving of gifts is a way of asserting his power. The penguin and the banker offer pebbles of varying brilliance to their respective loved ones. The finch presents twigs and leaves to its mate as the young man presents woolen threads in the form of carpets and curtains to his fiancee. The swallow and the woman begin to thing of the nest the moment they have chosen their males.
    André Maurois

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