Crosswise thread drawn over and under a warp to make cloth.
1Heroic literature is only one thread in the weft of medieval literature.
2Discovery of a fleet, striking the admiral's flag and making a weft.
3The damp smell of carrion earth, death and the weft of life.
4The undyed weft is then woven across the web in the usual way.
5By the third motion the batten crowds this weft-thread into place.
6Mixed marriages are part of the warp and weft of contemporary British Catholicism.
7The weft is thick, and the weave is also plain.
8And so, like some weft of opalescent mist, the sweet mirage melted in the noonday.
9The thoroughness of this packing down of the weft is for several reasons very important.
10And gold-weft couches, reclining on them face to face.
11Her grief-andthe memory of baby Ian-wasour weft.
12Beyond the hole, the warp and weft of his shroud glittered like a promised land.
13But the warp and weft of personal family tradition is never quite so cut and dried.
14The weft of starlings' motivations connected to the thick, sticky strand of a young thief's laugh.
15Her light on the grass-blades wove them into a carpet with its weft of faint moonbeams.
16They are warp and weft, fire and flame.