tinge | | often a cloth traveling case or bag |
tumbling | | truism, a remark or statement that may be true but is boring and has no meaning because it has been said so many times before |
snatched | | having corrugations corrugated paper also : made of corrugated material (such as cardboard or metal) |
clutches | | lazy, untidy, and often rude person |
cobble | | to spend time making yourself look attractive |
trinket | | the highest point or top of a shape or object: |
Jacobean | | falling down suddenly |
hold-all | | to stick onto or hold something or someone tightly, or to refuse to stop holding it |
enclosed | | to add a slight amount of color or a quality to something |
corrugated | | to make something completely clean |
shingle | | rounded stone used on the surface of an old-fashioned road |
clapboard | | important road for travelling long distances at high speed |
cling | | surrounded by a wall and often covered |
trunk road | | to save goods from damage or destruction |
bisect | | the claws or a hand in the act of grasping or seizing firmly |
balmy | | Artistic styles during the reign (1603–25) of James I |
cencertina | | small decorative object, or a piece of jewellery that is cheap or of low quality |
sojourn | | (of weather) pleasantly warm |
platitude | | wooden siding of a building in the form of horizontal boards, often overlapping |
contemptuous | | to divide something into two, usually equal, parts |
cleanse | | small, round stones that cover a beach or the ground by the edge of a river |
preen | | expressing or feeling a lack of respect |
apex | | short period when a person stays in a particular place |
slob | | To fold, crush, or push together |
salvage | | to take hold of something suddenly and roughly |