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  feat2 featherbed  
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   The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.  2000.
 
feather
 
SYLLABICATION:feath·er
PRONUNCIATION:  fthr
NOUN:1. One of the light, flat growths forming the plumage of birds, consisting of numerous slender, closely arranged parallel barbs forming a vane on either side of a horny, tapering, partly hollow shaft. 2. feathers Plumage. 3. feathers Clothing; attire. 4. A feathery tuft or fringe of hair, as on the legs or tail of some dogs. 5. Character, kind, or nature: Birds of a feather flock together. 6. Something small, trivial, or inconsequential. 7a. A strip, wedge, or flange used as a strengthening part. b. A wedge or key that fits into a groove to make a joint. 8. The vane of an arrow. 9. A feather-shaped flaw, as in a precious stone. 10. The wake made by a submarine's periscope. 11. The act of feathering the blade of an oar in rowing.
VERB:Inflected forms: feath·ered, feath·er·ing, feath·ers
TRANSITIVE VERB:1. To cover, dress, or decorate with or as if with feathers. 2. To fit (an arrow) with a feather. 3a. To thin, reduce, or fringe the edge of by cutting, shaving, or wearing away. b. To shorten and taper (hair) by cutting and thinning. 4. To connect with a tongue-and-groove joint. 5. To turn (an oar blade) almost horizontal as it is carried back after each stroke. 6a. To alter the pitch of (a propeller) so that the chords of the blades are parallel with the line of flight. b. To alter the pitch of (the rotor of a helicoptor) while in forward flight. 7. To turn off (an aircraft engine) while in flight.
INTRANSITIVE VERB:1. To grow feathers or become feathered. 2. To move, spread, or grow in a manner suggestive of feathers. 3. To feather an oar. 4. To feather a propeller.
IDIOMS:feather in (one's) cap An act or deed to one's credit; a distinctive achievement. feather (one's) nest To grow wealthy by taking advantage of one's position or by making use of property or funds left in one's trust. in fine (or good) (or high) feather In excellent form, health, or humor.
ETYMOLOGY:Middle English fether, from Old English. See pet- in Appendix I.
 
 
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by the Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

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  feat2 featherbed  
 
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