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sash
1[ sash ]
noun
- a long band or scarf worn over one shoulder or around the waist, as by military officers as a part of the uniform or by women and children for ornament.
verb (used with object)
- to furnish or adorn with a sash:
a dress sashed at the waist.
sash
2[ sash ]
noun
- a fixed or movable framework, as in a window or door, in which panes of glass are set.
- such frameworks collectively.
verb (used with object)
- to furnish with sashes or with windows having sashes.
sash
1/ sæʃ /
noun
- a long piece of ribbon, silk, etc, worn around the waist like a belt or over one shoulder, as a symbol of rank
sash
2/ sæʃ /
noun
- a frame that contains the panes of a window or door
verb
- to furnish with a sash, sashes, or sash windows
Other Words From
- sashless adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of sash1
Word History and Origins
Origin of sash1
Origin of sash2
Example Sentences
Then, friends told The Daily Beast, she took the sash and laid it at his grave, a way of dedicating the milestone to her lost love.
It holds various images and statues of, for example, Mahakala, a protector god whose crown is ringed with skulls and whose sash is strung with severed heads.
She used to wear that beautiful dress with a sash with all of the crosses of Monaco.
I also catch a peek at an attractive blond woman wearing a light gold dress, a tiara and a sash that reads "Miss Golden Berries."
Then another sound broke upon my ears like the raising of a window sash.
A more elegant pencil dress/trench looked a little like a kimono that was tied with a feminine sash.
I began by wrapping the sash around my neck to try and create the halter-top.
Resting the torch on the leads, he grasped the sash and gently raised the window, noting that it opened almost noiselessly.
There are narrow sash windows on the façade and a plain square-transomed doorway with a center wrought-iron balcony overhead.
She braced herself against the sash as the house shook in the strongest earthquake she had ever felt.
Gilbert perceived a stately head under a hat, when all were uncovered, and a blue sash.
"Gilbert," said the nobleman, who was puffing himself up at the coach window, in his handsome red sash of the order of knighthood.
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