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gauze
[ gawz ]
noun
- any thin and often transparent fabric made from any fiber in a plain or open weave.
- a surgical dressing of loosely woven cotton.
- any material made of an open, meshlike weave, as of wire.
- a thin haze.
gauze
/ ɡɔːz /
noun
- a transparent cloth of loose plain or leno weave
- ( as modifier )
a gauze veil
- a surgical dressing of muslin or similar material
- any thin openwork material, such as wire
- a fine mist or haze
Other Words From
- gauze·like adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of gauze1
Word History and Origins
Origin of gauze1
Example Sentences
Patient wounds routinely crawling with maggots because health care facilities have no access to soap, gauze, disinfectant and running water.
When Ms Guy arrived she was shown into the salon where she said there “was blood splatter up the walls” and “gauze swabs lying around that had still got blood on from the previous person”.
When he appeared just 48 hours later at his party's convention in Milwaukee with gauze over his ear, some in the crowd were weeping.
But it’s her dreamy delivery of Alfred Tennyson’s “The Lady of Shalott” that stops time, wraps it in gauze and conveys the full tragedy of a heroine yearning to be known and, yet, hidden away.
“The dressing’s bulked up a bit because you need a bit of absorbent. You don’t want to be walking around with bloody gauze on his ear,” Jackson said.
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