Table of Contents
1. velvet
noun. ['ˈvɛlvət'] a silky densely piled fabric with a plain back.
Etymology
- veluotte (Old French (842-ca. 1400))
- villus (Latin)
Rhymes with Velvet
- affidavit
- calvet
- charvat
- civet
- covet
- evatt
- govett
- gravatt
- horvat
- hrovat
- hrovat
- javett
- mcdavitt
- mcdevitt
- mcdivett
- mcdivitt
- mckevitt
- pivot
- privott
- rivet
Sentences with velvet
1. Noun, singular or mass
Drape the tables in red satin or red velvet for a rich and expensive feel.
Quotes about velvet
1. You're only human. You live once and life is wonderful so eat the damn red velvet cupcake!
- Emma Stone
2. Self-destruction would be a brief, almost autoerotic free-fall into a great velvet darkness.
- Mark Mirabello, The Cannibal Within
3. Someone was coming through the velvet.He was pulling it wide, he was stepping onto Kestrel’s balcony—close, closer still as she turned and the curtain swayed, then stopped. He pinned the velvet against frame. He held the sweep of it high, at the level of his gray eyes, which were silver in the shadows.He was here. He had come.Arin.
- Marie Rutkoski, The Winner's Crime
2. velvet-leaf
noun. arborescent perennial shrub having palmately lobed furry leaves and showy red-purple flowers; southwestern United States.
3. velvet-leaf
noun. tall annual herb or subshrub of tropical Asia having velvety leaves and yellow flowers and yielding a strong fiber; naturalized in southeastern Europe and United States.
Antonyms
5. velvet
adjective. ['ˈvɛlvət'] smooth and soft to sight or hearing or touch or taste.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- veluotte (Old French (842-ca. 1400))
- villus (Latin)