An earthy variety of hematite iron ore, used as a pigment.
To make, as fabric, by interlacing threads.
Small wood or sticks split like laths to bind a wall for plastering it over with loam or mortar.
A hedge formed by interweaving the shoots and branches of trees or shrubs.
1Old Wellington face, shrunk, cheeks burning in a senile raddle.
2There is a removable loom attachment which when first shown to me was called a raddle.
3Fol-der-rol, de-rol de raddle, fol--
4Oh, fol-de-rol, de raddle rol.
5But since the white people came the blue bag has put yellow out of fashion, and raddle is used for the red.
6The narcotic- and agony-raddled memories of the punishment factory had assaulted him.
7They had seen, perhaps, the raddled face of some final awful retribution.
8Compared with the others, these were small, but raddled with damage.
9The last of the free wizards crept through the raddled landscape like ghosts.
10He makes a living ghostwriting the autobiographies of raddled showbiz veterans.
11As it turns out, Mary is raddled, deluded and usually drunk.
12You can hear it - the raddled echo of Nuremberg.
13Listen, Doctor, do you seriously want to be part of some raddled witch's septic ovaries?
14And as they become more insane and addicted and raddled with disease, the quantity increased.
15The others soon followed in ones and twos, looking equally raddled except for Lynx, as usual.
16It has portrayed the unrest as the work of drug-raddled youths, terrorists and al Qaeda militants.