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Woolly   /wˈʊli/   Listen
adjective
Woolly  adj.  
1.
Consisting of wool; as, a woolly covering; a woolly fleece.
2.
Resembling wool; of the nature of wool. "My fleece of woolly hair."
3.
Clothed with wool. "Woolly breeders."
4.
(Bot.) Clothed with a fine, curly pubescence resembling wool.
Woolly bear (Zool.), the hairy larva of several species of bombycid moths. The most common species in the United States are the salt-marsh caterpillar (see under Salt), the black and red woolly bear, or larva of the Isabella moth, and the yellow woolly bear, or larva of the American ermine moth (Spilosoma Virginica).
Woolly butt (Bot.), an Australian tree (Eucalyptus longifolia), so named because of its fibrous bark.
Woolly louse (Zool.), a plant louse (Schizoneura lanigera syn Erisoma lanigera) which is often very injurious to the apple tree. It is covered with a dense coat of white filaments somewhat resembling fine wool or cotton. In exists in two forms, one of which infests the roots, the other the branches.
Woolly macaco (Zool.), the mongoose lemur.
Woolly maki (Zool.), a long-tailed lemur (Indris laniger) native of Madagascar, having fur somewhat like wool; called also avahi, and woolly lemur.
Woolly monkey (Zool.), any South American monkey of the genus Lagothrix, as the caparro.
Woolly rhinoceros (Paleon.), an extinct rhinoceros (Rhinoceros tichorhinus) which inhabited the arctic regions, and was covered with a dense coat of woolly hair. It has been found frozen in the ice of Siberia, with the flesh and hair well preserved.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Woolly" Quotes from Famous Books



... Levinstein) would make a better landlord than the old squire, in spite of the prejudices of the countryside.... No, I am afraid it would be stretching a point to promise you any great entertainment from this well-intentioned but rather woolly book. Brother Jenkins, the fraud, of the Society of Seven, is about the ...
— Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 152, May 16, 1917. • Various

... Mrs. Graham, hurling, for want of something better, one of her satin slippers at the woolly head, which dodged out of the door in ...
— 'Lena Rivers • Mary J. Holmes

... from the room of the long shed, but did not pierce the gloom that lurked between the piles of cargo. A flock of sheep, moving in a dense woolly mass, came down a gangway; squealing pigs occupied a bay across the piles of goods. The front of the shed was open and in places one saw a faint reflection that looked like water. Opposite Barbara, the gap between the low roof and dock-sill was filled by a deckhouse and a steamer's ...
— Lister's Great Adventure • Harold Bindloss

... there always. The oldest man cannot say when the great white hollows were first scooped out of the chalk, or the dewponds made on the heights. Ever since there were people in Sussex—whether it is five thousand years ago or fifteen thousand—the short wind-swept turf has been grazed by woolly flocks. Before ever a Norman castle held a vantage- height the tansy grew dark and rank in cottage gardens and the children went gathering woodruff and speedwell and the elfin gold of "little socks and shoes." Any change, good or bad, is a loss to some one—the ...
— Masters of the Guild • L. Lamprey

... a row of toys, plaster cats, barking dogs, a Noah's ark, and an enormous woolly lamb. This last struck Dick with admiration. He stood on tip-toe with his hands clasped behind his back ...
— Nine Little Goslings • Susan Coolidge


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