Dictionary
weird / 'wɪəd /
adj. weird·er, weird·est
-
Strikingly odd or unusual, especially in an unsettling way; strange:
He lives in a weird old house on a dark street. Your neighbor is
said to be a little weird. I felt a little weird after drinking
that tea.
-
Suggestive of the supernatural:
weird stories about ghosts.
-
Archaic Of or relating to fate or the Fates.
web / web /
n.
-
-
A woven fabric, especially one on a loom or just removed from
it.
- The structural part of cloth.
-
A latticed or woven structure:
A web of palm branches formed the roof of the hut.
-
A structure of delicate, threadlike filaments characteristically
spun by spiders or certain insect larvae.
-
Something intricately contrived, especially something that ensnares
or entangles: caught in a web of lies.
-
A complex, interconnected structure or arrangement:
a web of telephone wires.
-
often Web The World Wide Web.
-
A radio or television network.
-
A membrane or fold of skin connecting the toes, as of certain
amphibians, birds, and mammals.
-
The barbs on each side of the shaft of a bird's feather; a vane.
-
Baseball A piece of leather or leather mesh that fills the
space between the thumb and forefinger of a baseball glove. Also
called trap, webbing.
-
Architecture A space or compartment between the ribs or
groins of a vault. Also called cell.
-
A metal sheet or plate connecting the heavier sections, ribs, or
flanges of a structural element.
-
A thin metal plate or strip, as the bit of a key or the blade of a
saw.
-
A large continuous roll of paper, such as newsprint, either in the
process of manufacture or as it is fed into a web press.
workers / 'wɜ:kəz /
See: personnel
personnel / ˌpɜːsəˈnel /
band of employees, body of employees, cast, clerical staff, company,
corps of employyes, coworkers, crew, factotums, fellow workers, help,
labor supply, laborers, laboring force, manpower, members, office force,
servantry, servants, staff, team of emmloyees, work force, work party,
workers, working people
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