Encara no tenim significats per a "start to fray".
1Now it would start to fray.
2My mother's seamstress tells her that most women now are rehemming their skirts instead of buying new ones when the edges start to fray.
3Right about now their sense of wellbeing may be starting to fray.
4It was starting to fray, the logs pocked with misty holes.
5But a male pastoralist arrives and his temper starts to fray.
6The synchronized growth of last year has already started to fray, especially in Europe.
7But the Sri Lankan spin is starting to fray.
8Once a wire starts to fray, have it replaced.
9Her other pair had had paper-thin soles, and the seams had been starting to fray.
10The material is starting to fray.
11That tie-up with the city started to fray as the city's legacy costs, particularly pensions owed to retirees, mounted.
12Until Clive Woodward's post-match temper started to fray, Saturday was as close to ideal as England could have wished.
13The bag was starting to fray, which wasn't really a surprise considering all the oddly shaped pieces it contained.
14Rooney was booked for a foul on Mikel Arteta and, with tempers starting to fray, Ferguson hauled the England man off.
15She had on a T-shirt and a warm polo sweater with a seam that had started to fray at the neck.
16I bought it a couple of weeks ago to transport my surfboard after my last cord started to fray, but hell.