[
US
/ˈɪzɝd/
]
[ UK /ˈɪzəd/ ]
[ UK /ˈɪzəd/ ]
NOUN
-
the 26th letter of the Roman alphabet
the British call Z zed and the Scots call it ezed but Americans call it zee
he doesn't know A from izzard
How To Use izzard In A Sentence
- Stark gave Izzard the warmest of welcomes and seems to have put no obstacle in the way of a biography.
- For two days it had been snowing, great flakes so plume-like that they seemed almost artificial, making one think of the blizzards which originate high in theatre-flies under the sovereignty of a stage-hand who sweats at his task of controlling the elements. Then I'll Come Back to You
- British summers mean we get rain, wind, sun, snow and frost all in the same week but our winters are just so glum, no blizzards just unrelenting dankness.
- As there were no crushing teeth in the mouth, vegetation must have been swallowed and then crushed in a gizzard similar to that found in many birds.
- The presence of gastroliths (gizzard stones) in the rib cages of some specimens shows that this view is correct.
- There has also been a blizzard of complaints about poor customer service, falling earnings, rising debt, and a hostile attempt to force changes at board level.
- We once got stuck in a blizzard for six hours.
- So has this blizzard of data cleared the fog that clouds the path of borrowing costs? Times, Sunday Times
- It usually contains pebbles and seems to be used for ‘chewing’ in much the same way as a bird's gizzard.
- Quite a few of them would even stub out their cigarettes so enraptured, and intimidated, would they be by the blizzard of technical virtuosity that we, today, take for granted. Debra Levine: Ballets Russes Updated: Aspen Santa Fe Ballet Turns 15