[
US
/ˈɹɪdʒd/
]
[ UK /ɹˈɪdʒd/ ]
[ UK /ɹˈɪdʒd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
having a ridge or shaped like a ridge or suggesting the keel of a ship
a carinate sepal
How To Use ridged In A Sentence
- On the moor, we crossed becks bridged by railway sleepers and bulging with pondweed and we met a couple of cyclists.
- The gap should also be bridged between heads of departments and principals.
- In addition to the unique single vascular system, these new specimens exhibit a distinct six ridged external shape, and an integumentary morphology shared by no other medullosan ovules.
- John Wesley edited an abridged edition and used it widely to support his sermons.
- Kevin Wilkinson's simple metal dinghy, propelled by a single scull from a rowlock at the stern, maintains one of the oldest crossings of the Mersey – now transferred to the canal because the nearby river itself is bridged. Britain's Best Views: the Mersey ferry, Liverpool
- She also subscribes to the talking book service run by the Royal National Institute of the Blind, where she can get complete, unabridged novels on audio tape.
- It used to be that an unabridged dictionary and an encyclopedia would be kept accessible in middle-class homes, for settling questions of language or fact.
- The abyss of ethnographic otherness has been momentarily bridged.
- Again, the unabridged dictionary gives "sinewy" as its first definition of "nervous. The Human Brain
- Critics of Belgian policy contend that the right to enter is abridged in a number of instances. Refugees in the Age of Total War