[
US
/ˈmɪdʒ/
]
[ UK /mˈɪdʒ/ ]
[ UK /mˈɪdʒ/ ]
NOUN
- minute two-winged mosquito-like fly lacking biting mouthparts; appear in dancing swarms especially near water
How To Use midge In A Sentence
- Most people would probably mistake them for small flies, such as gnats or midges.
- Unhealthy waterways and wetlands mean more midges and mozzies; another reason to keep our Hearns Lake foreshores safe from human occupation.
- I took out the tuner, and began tuning it just a smidge sharp, because I like the sound of it better that way.
- Speaking for the Midgets Rights Group of America (MRGA), I would like to inform you the term midget is quite offensive. It's Christmas On Hoth
- The Republican Party's slapstick search for a leader would be heartwarming and sidesplitting, but for the tragic knowledge that one of these scrambling midgets will collect tens of millions of votes in the presidential election of 2012. Frank Schaeffer: President Obama Will Win In An Overwhelming Landslide in 2012 and Will Deserve the Victory
- Once upon a time there was a little sidepocket universe consisting only of midgets who had been harvested from the Golden Age of Hollywood. Clubhouse update
- For example, the midget submarine sunk by the USS Ward had the wrong bow and stern structure.
- A dusk of midges danced above but their features were set like grim tutelaries. At Swim, Two Boys
- And perhaps, a smidgeon of hope. Times, Sunday Times
- Give people exactly what they remember a genre is all about, add a smidgeon of irony/contemporary cultural reference to taste, count the money.