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"twilling" Definitions
  1. twilled fabric

8 Sentences With "twilling"

How to use twilling in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "twilling" and check conjugation/comparative form for "twilling". Mastering all the usages of "twilling" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Twilling also testified that Mujey was fearful that "something would happen to her," WWMT reports.
Jennifer Twilling, an East Kentwood High School guidance counselor, testified during the trial that she was with Mujey when she spoke to the police and that prior to that, "she told me on multiple occasions she knew the right thing, but she was afraid," Twilling said, according to WWMT.
Jennifer Twilling, an East Kentwood High School guidance counselor, testified Tuesday in Kent County Circuit Court that she was with Mujey when she spoke to the police and that prior to that, "she told me on multiple occasions she knew the right thing, but she was afraid," Twilling said, according to WWMT.
But, while I was in Telomere for the Martillo thing, I got a letter from Twilling, you remember, in sales?
"She told me that he knew where she lived and knew where her bus stop was, and she was afraid he would do something," Twilling reportedly testified.
Jennifer Twilling, a guidance counselor at East Kentwood High School — Mujey's school and James' former employer — testified Tuesday about how Mujey, accompanied by her aunt, first disclosed the alleged abuse.
Spitfire and the cutter captured the brig Gute Hoffnung. In December 1799 Spitfire captured the Danish ship Twilling Riget. On 22 January 1800 Spitfire came in from Kinsale to Plymouth with a Danish vessel, Havel Rerli, with a cargo of spices and the like, from Batavia. The cargo was worth £150,000 and supposed to be Dutch property.
The original name of tweed fabric was "tweel", the Scots word for twill, as the fabric was woven in a twill weave rather than a plain (or tabby) weave. A number of theories exist as to how and why "tweel" became corrupted into "tweed"; in one, a London merchant in the 1830s, upon receiving a letter from a Hawick firm inquiring after "tweels", misinterpreted the spelling as a trade name taken from the River Tweed, which flows through the Scottish Borders. Subsequently, the goods were advertised as "tweed", the name used ever since.Dunbar cites Scots philologist W. F. H. Nicolaisen's suggestion that this "too plausible" explanation may be folk etymology, noting a use of "twedlyne" in 1541, and suggesting "tweedling" in parallel to "twilling" as the origin of "tweed"; see John Telfer Dunbar, The Costume of Scotland, p. 150.

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