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View synonyms for skein

skein

[ skeyn ]

noun

  1. a length of yarn or thread wound on a reel or swift preparatory for use in manufacturing.
  2. anything wound in or resembling such a coil:

    a skein of hair.

  3. something suggestive of the twistings of a skein:

    an incoherent skein of words.

  4. a flock of geese, ducks, or the like, in flight.
  5. a succession or series of similar or interrelated things:

    a skein of tennis victories.



skein

/ skeɪn /

noun

  1. a length of yarn, etc, wound in a long coil
  2. something resembling this, such as a lock of hair
  3. a flock of geese flying Compare gaggle
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Word History and Origins

Origin of skein1

First recorded in 1400–50; late Middle English skeyne, skayne, from Middle French escaigne; further origin unknown
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Word History and Origins

Origin of skein1

C15: from Old French escaigne, of unknown origin
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Example Sentences

It’s dry, with apricot and pear flavors and a skein of minerality that carries the fruit through to a long, satisfying finish.

Murray doesn't draw any at all, and doesn't seem even to be aware that any such skein is required.

It was a part of himself, woven unchangeably into his life in a glowing skein, the brilliant colors of which could never fade.

Nevertheless, if the skein of ideas was entangled, each thread in itself was a thread of gold.

The spinning wheel stands against the wall and above it from a peg hangs a heavy skein of black wool.

But the Seine was but a skein of silk stretched across the city; the water was hidden by the craft.

Sometimes I dye one end of a skein, and leave the other untouched; that gives quite a good effect.

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skeighskeletal