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edging

[ US /ˈɛdʒɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /ˈɛd‍ʒɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. border consisting of anything placed on the edge to finish something (such as a fringe on clothing or on a rug)

How To Use edging In A Sentence

  • Chains with more marketing clout, economies of scale and smarter ways of responding to rising costs are edging out smaller chains or those that fail to attract choosier customers. Hamburgers, Fries and a Shakeout
  • For example, while acknowledging that Whitney wants us to worship religious monuments and funerary traditions, we may wonder which Church he is referring to.
  • The heavy-handed allusiveness may just be an aesthetic mistake, a secondary flaw we have to countenance while otherwise acknowledging the narrative power of the novel as a whole. Translated Texts
  • But look, when are we going to say that things that have gone on decades ago, or 10 years or more ago, should always be dredged up, just because there might be some political advantage to dredging it up?
  • The ship is edging in with the coast.
  • They had on little white aprons, trimmed with jaconet edging, and collars as clean and white as snow. "Co. Aytch" Maury Grays, First Tennessee Regiment or, A Side Show of the Big Show
  • Marked by a distinctive black edging to the prints, Paul's film output was distinguished particularly by trick films and news films.
  • From a flurry of delighted children sledging down a snowswept street in Bath to policemen joining in with group of teenagers having a snowball fight in Poole - your pics are helping us capture Britain as it is swept by snow.
  • I had the parcel on the ground, and waited for ages, edging gradually into position, when it arrived.
  • Perhaps acknowledging this incongruity, he spoofed his desperation in a series of photographs that mock his suicide.
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