[
US
/ˈsɪndʒ/
]
[ UK /sˈɪndʒ/ ]
[ UK /sˈɪndʒ/ ]
NOUN
- a surface burn
VERB
-
burn superficially or lightly
I singed my eyebrows -
become superficially burned
my eyebrows singed when I bent over the flames
How To Use singe In A Sentence
- Intellectual Dublin seemed no longer to consist of writers, but of folk singers, bearded or otherwise.
- But then he got a little disingenuous. Times, Sunday Times
- The Israelis already possess them, operating disingenuously and outside international norms again, an exceptionalism granted by the United States’ favor andmight. The Volokh Conspiracy » Pro-Palestinian “Peace Activists”
- We have introduced singers like Madeline Bell as headliners and I think the club is beginning to take off.
- Most African music features one singer or star, but this is a guitar band. Times, Sunday Times
- That's as clear an admission as one could hope for that the entire exercise is disingenuous.
- the morphological relation between `sing' and `singer' and `song' is derivational
- Possibly one of the most compassionate pieces of music ever made, it asks us, no, arranges that we see the plight of what I'll be brutal and call a lovelorn drag queen with such intense empathy that when the singer hurts him, we do too. Archive 2009-02-01
- A friend of the singer said: ‘She was thrilled because a year ago she was being written off and people were saying her career was heading for the dumper.’
- the singers have to warm up