knobbed
Appearance
English
[edit]Verb
[edit]knobbed
- simple past and past participle of knob
Adjective
[edit]knobbed (not comparable)
- Having a knob or knobs.
- a knobbed chromosome
- 1774, Oliver Goldsmith, An History of the Earth, and Animated Nature, London: J. Nourse, Volume 4, Chapter 11, The Camelopard, pp. 299-300,[1]
- No animal, either from its disposition, or its formation, seems less fitted for a state of natural hostility; its horns are blunt, and even knobbed at the ends; its teeth are made entirely for vegetable pasture […]
- 1853, Elizabeth Gaskell, chapter 8, in Cranford[2]:
- The chairs […] were railed with white bars across the back and knobbed with gold; neither the railings nor the knobs invited to ease.
- 1925, Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway[3]:
- For it's been a hard life, thought Mrs. Dempster. What hadn’t she given to it? Roses; figure; her feet too. (She drew the knobbed lumps beneath her skirt.)
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]equipped with a knob
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