Definition & Meaning | English word SUPERFINE


SUPERFINE

Definitions of SUPERFINE

  1. Extremely subtle or refined; extremely sensitive to slight impressions or perceptions. [from 16th c.]
  2. Extremely refined or sophisticated; very elegant. [from 16th c.]
  3. Having an especially fine size or texture; made of very small particles or threads. [from 17th c.]
  4. Of a very high or pure grade or quality. [from 17th c.]
  5. Very good, excellent. [from 19th c.]

Number of letters

9

Is palindrome

No

18
ER
ERF
FI
FIN
IN
NE
PE
PER
RF
RFI
SU
SUP

5

5

976
EE
EEF
EEN
EEP
EER
EES
EF
EFE

Examples of Using SUPERFINE in a Sentence

  • With the minutest attention to detail; with the keenest observation for shades of difference; with an almost superfine susceptibility to climatic and meteorological changes, so that she might be termed a realist in word-painting, she at the same time possessed the glow and the imagination of the impressionist.
  • Modern Sadras was established as part of Dutch Coromandel in the seventeenth century, which was even before center for weaving superfine muslin cloth for export besides pearl and edible oil.
  • Short-stapled wools are more profitably used in the woollen section where high-grade material may be produced from superfine wool.
  • Tradition has it that when these Fidalgos went for Mass, a special place was set apart to protect their superfine umbrellas, chiefly made of red damask.
  • The prize-winning superfine merino wools of the Western District had been extolled by the Thomas Shaws, C.
  • Officers' coats were made from superfine broadcloth; manufactured from much finer imported Spanish wool, spun finer and with more warps and wefts per inch.
  • Phulia and Samudragarh specialize in a combination of jacquard and jamdani work which are based on Tangail Saree Culture of Bangladesh while Santipur is known for superfine dhotis and jacquards.
  • The material's softness and suppleness arise from the structure of the non-woven fabric's special fibers, superfine fiber construction and tiny cavities.
  • In printing fine work during the mid-19th century, the blankets that lay between the tympans were either fine kerseymere or superfine woolen cloth.
  • Contemporaries remarked on his loud laughter and his habit of humming operatic airs as he strode around town, of tapping his baton importunately on the podium and glaring at restive concert audiences to achieve silence when conducting, and of writing explosive comments – such as "O superfine Assiduity" and "monstrous ignorance" – in the margins of books he read, by way of showing his contempt for the writer.
  • " The Los Angeles Times determined that "this ice-breaking-if scarcely ground-breaking-disc is still a purr-fect poolside party platter for too-hepcats 'n' snake-hipped kittens as well as fine, fine, superfine grist for the live show's gin mill.
  • The earliest recorded Herb Strewer was Bridget Rumney, who held the post from 1660 to 1671 and received an annual salary of £24, as well as two yards of superfine scarlet cloth for livery, as did all of her successors.
  • The Cormo is an Australian breed of sheep developed in Tasmania by crossing Corriedale rams with superfine Saxon Merino ewes in the early 1960s.
  • In earlier days Dhaniakhali also produced superfine dhotis but has switched over to saris as per changes in market demand.
  • Donelson Smith, Dianne Sonnenwald, Richard Superfine, Sean Washburn, Chris Weigle, Mary Whitton, Leandra Vicci, Martin Guthold, Tom Hudson, Philip Williams, and Warren Robinett.
  • Alkali deweighting of bicomponent containing polytrimethylene terephthalate/polyamide 6 separates the PTT and nylon components of the yarns, resulting in superfine filaments with a change in fiber diameter and shape.



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