[
UK
/ɹˈaɪmd/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
covered with frost
hedgerows were rimed and stiff with frost
a frosty glass
How To Use rimed In A Sentence
- Your stepson could have been left in a dysregulated state whereby he is primed to be constantly hypervigilant to threat and to respond. Times, Sunday Times
- He primed his last grenade and threw it into the group of aliens.
- The powder charge and the ball and patch had to be rammed separately down the tight-fitting barrel and the pan primed with powder.
- The only sign of life there today came from a mouldy old caravan, all steamy windows and grimed with neglect, where a radio was playing Sunday morning music of the popular kind.
- We creep the hill, flat on our bellies through yellowed grass and stone, black dirt grimed on our bright faces like powdered war paint. Along the Battlement
- His clothes are begrimed with oil and dirt.
- This sequence occurred around halfway through the interview, so the interviewees were primed by then into realizing that more details were expected.
- Sail-trimmer, and Pumpman; a primed candle for each battle-lantern; a thumbstall and vent-guard for the 1st and 2d Captains of each gun. Ordnance Instructions for the United States Navy. 1866. Fourth edition.
- These big, freely painted, heavily collaged unprimed canvases together form something of a spiritual marching band, though they mostly seem to follow the beat of Jean-Michel Basquiat.
- Maybe I had picked up the wrong gadget, and it was a calorie counter, primed to record a Big Mac and fries.