What is the meaning of WOA. Phrases containing WOA
See meanings and uses of WOA!Slangs & AI meanings
Liquid from wet beef curtains, i.e. a woamns genital lubricant.
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n.
An herb (Reseda luteola) related to mignonette, growing in Europe, and to some extent in America; dyer's broom; dyer's rocket; dyer's weed; wild woad. It is used by dyers to give a yellow color.
n.
Same as Woadwaxen.
a.
Colored or stained with woad.
n.
Woad.
n.
Woad-waxed.
n.
A leguminous plant (Genista tinctoria) of Europe and Russian Asia, and adventitious in America; -- called also greenwood, greenweed, dyer's greenweed, and whin, wood-wash, wood-wax, and wood-waxen.
n.
See Woad.
n.
See Weld.
n.
A plant affording a blue dye; the woad (Isatis tinctoria); also, the dye itself.
n.
A genus of herbs, some species of which, especially the Isatis tinctoria, yield a blue dye similar to indigo; woad.
n.
A blue dyestuff, or coloring matter, consisting of the powdered and fermented leaves of the Isatis tinctoria. It is now superseded by indigo, but is somewhat used with indigo as a ferment in dyeing.
n.
Woad.
n.
An herbaceous cruciferous plant (Isatis tinctoria). It was formerly cultivated for the blue coloring matter derived from its leaves.
n.
A glucoside obtained from woad (indigo plant) and other plants, as a yellow or light brown sirup. It has a nauseous bitter taste, a decomposes or drying. By the action of acids, ferments, etc., it breaks down into sugar and indigo. It is the source of natural indigo.
n.
Woad.
n.
A blue dyestuff obtained from several plants belonging to very different genera and orders; as, the woad, Isatis tinctoria, Indigofera tinctoria, I. Anil, Nereum tinctorium, etc. It is a dark blue earthy substance, tasteless and odorless, with a copper-violet luster when rubbed. Indigo does not exist in the plants as such, but is obtained by decomposition of the glycoside indican.
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