distaff in English

noun
1
a stick or spindle onto which wool or flax is wound for spinning.
Then she brought forth a sack of carded wool, and three distaffs , and brought this all over to where we sat.
adjective

Use "distaff" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "distaff" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "distaff", or refer to the context using the word "distaff" in the English Dictionary.

1. The worker is pushing the distaff.

2. The distaff whirled, twisting the threads.

3. He is my uncle on the distaff side.

4. The wool was wound on a long stick called a distaff.

5. She adjusted the loose threads in one hand and held the distaff in the other.

6. The most embarrassing display by the administration , however , came from the distaff side .

7. Asteroid 172 Baucis An ancient Greek poet whose work is now lost, contemporaneous with Sappho and Erinna, apostrophized in Erinna's long poem The Distaff: Erinna#The Distaff An ancient Greek wrestler from Troezen

8. At the moment several new factors are combining to favour the distaff side more.

9. But one person could only, with a distaff , make one thread at a time.

10. Among the Hebrews and others the distaff and spindle were employed in this process.

11. The distaff and the spindle were sticks used to spin or make thread and yarn.

12. In one hand, a woman holds the distaff, with the fibers loosely wrapped around it.

13. The foot on the cradle, the hand on the distaff, a sign of good housewife.

14. They may find they have more two on their distaff that they know how to spin.

15. Made curious, she took the distaff in her hand and began to draw out the thread.

16. Her hands she has thrust out to the distaff, and her own hands take hold of the spindle.”

17. Out of it she drew a little distaff, much as we would draw out a pair of knitting needles.

18. Authenticity in Comfort Zone at Santa Anita While most of the New York-based horses for the Breeders' Cup Distaff (gr

19. (Proverbs 31:10, 19) This is a description of the spinning process, using the distaff and the spindle, basically two simple sticks.

20. There were different about their attitudes toward distaff , but what they searched were harmonious relationship between men and women and human beauty future.

21. Bedizen (v.) "deck, dress up" (especially with tawdry or vulgar finery), 1660s, from be- + dizen "to dress" (1610s), especially, from late 18c., "to dress finely, adorn," originally "to dress (a distaff) for spinning" (1520s), and evidently the verbal form of the first element in distaff.

22. But the neuroscientists believe they have an answer to this scientific riddle, uncovering a distaff preference for red, hidden atop the universal liking for blue.

23. Betushka had no distaff, so she wound the flax around her head. Then she took the little basket and went romping and singing behind the goats to the birch wood.

24. "Bedizen" descends from the older, now obsolete, verb "disen," which meant "to dress a distaff with flax" and which came to English by way of Middle Dutch