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English

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English Wikipedia has an article on:
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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Borrowed from French gaze, from Arabic قَزّ (qazz, silk).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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gauze (countable and uncountable, plural gauzes)

  1. A thin fabric with a loose, open weave.
  2. (medicine) A similar bleached cotton fabric used as a surgical dressing.
  3. A thin woven metal or plastic mesh.
  4. Wire gauze, used as fence.
  5. Mist or haze

Derived terms

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Translations

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Verb

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gauze (third-person singular simple present gauzes, present participle gauzing, simple past and past participle gauzed)

  1. To apply a dressing of gauze
  2. (literary) To mist; to become gauze-like.
    • 1902, Barbara Baynton, edited by Sally Krimmer and Alan Lawson, Bush Studies (Portable Australian Authors: Barbara Baynton), St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, published 1980, page 28:
      The wide plain gauzed into a sea on which the hut floated lonely.

See also

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Pennsylvania German

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Etymology

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Cf. German gauzen.

Verb

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gauze

  1. to bark
    Synonym: blaffe