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[ US /ˈwɪɡ/ ]
[ UK /wˈɪɡ/ ]
NOUN
  1. hairpiece covering the head and made of real or synthetic hair
  2. British slang for a scolding

How To Use wig In A Sentence

  • Could be that, or maybe she's a little wigged out working in an office full of blabbermouths.
  • Manure worms (also called brandlings, red wigglers, or angleworms) and red worms live in organic debris and are the preferred types for commercial bait production and composting.
  • In our own time such words as papoose, sachem, tepee, wigwam and wampum have begun to drop out of everyday use; 11 at an earlier period the language sloughed off ocelot, manitee, calumet, supawn, samp and quahaug, or began to degrade them to the estate of provincialisms. Chapter 2. The Beginnings of American. 2. Sources of Early Americanisms
  • They used dry twigs to start the fire.
  • She had wiggled through a tot-sized aperture in the alcove, and toddled over to a display of butterfly nets four feet away.
  • On a tree that is virtually bare, one can often see a solitary leaf still fluttering on a top twig. Times, Sunday Times
  • The typical Ruby-crowned Kinglet nest is deep and is suspended from two hanging twigs.
  • We're sitting in the middle of a gay pub, and - typically for a bunch of straight guys, I muse - they haven't twigged at all.
  • My son caught it by knocking it off the car with a twig, then coaxing it on to a piece of card, and then putting it in a jam jar.
  • Most women now wear their hair too short for traditional hairstyles, so they wear wigs to go with ritual dress.
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