[
UK
/klˈæd/
]
[ US /ˈkɫæd/ ]
[ US /ˈkɫæd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
wearing or provided with clothing; sometimes used in combination
clothed and in his right mind
white-clad nurses
proud of her well-clothed family
nurses clad in white -
having an outer covering especially of thin metal
armor-clad
steel-clad
How To Use clad In A Sentence
- Jeff, clad in board trunks and a T-shirt, leans back in his chair with the lappie on his, uhhh, lap, and his bare feet up on the desk. Savages
- They are essential atmospheric cladding which prevents the earth from becoming a frozen planet.
- For a great deal on cladded cookware, I'd recommend this Cuisinart set. "All of us are routing 'American Idol.' It’s so great. The No. 1 show in television and it's getting ruined."
- Each flat-roofed block is planted with sedum grass (that can absorb 70% of water run-off) and clad in slatted larch wood.
- The lower blocks are in concrete clad in gabions filled with site granite; roofs are planted with indigenous flora.
- Success in that final exam ensures that their parents' dream, which by now should also be their own, of a cap and gown clad university graduate is within grasp.
- Furthermore, outgroup comparison (with macaques, for example) indicates that some of these characters are primitive for the cercopithecid clade that includes these species (Papionina). Archive 2006-06-01
- Kislev is a land of dark pine forests, snow-clad wilderness and wind-swept steppes.
- For that reason its exterior façade is made of limestone on the ground floor and an innovative terra-cotta cladding on the upper floors. The Seigle House by Lohan Anderson
- Hiroshima -- As a mountain range rises angularly in the background, two Japanese misses, one in modern dress, the other clad in a traditional Japanese kimono, pose beside the Peace Bridge in Hiroshima during a day of remembrance, the ninth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima with atomic bombs. Archive 2009-01-01