Advertisement
Advertisement
fibre
[fahy-ber]
fibre
/ ˈfaɪbə /
noun
a natural or synthetic filament that may be spun into yarn, such as cotton or nylon
cloth or other material made from such yarn
a long fine continuous thread or filament
the structure of any material or substance made of or as if of fibres; texture
essential substance or nature
all the fibres of his being were stirred
strength of character (esp in the phrase moral fibre )
See dietary fibre
botany
a narrow elongated thick-walled cell: a constituent of sclerenchyma tissue
such tissue extracted from flax, hemp, etc, used to make linen, rope, etc
a very small root or twig
anatomy any thread-shaped structure, such as a nerve fibre
Other Word Forms
- fibreless adjective
- fibred adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of fibre1
Example Sentences
"It was all combed over, really flat, sprayed with almost half a can of the root touch up sprays and building fibres," he said.
Pair them with protein or fibre, and avoid combining with other carbs or sugary forms, such as juices and milkshakes.
But Edwards thinks the carbon fibre plates in today's running shoes may not actually be helping jumpers in contrast to the running events where records have continued to be broken.
The plan was to build its hull - the part where the passengers would sit - out of carbon fibre.
Carbon fibre has not been used for a deep diving sub before.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse