Nap - Law Dictionary Search Results
kidnap
[-na-pi] [probably back-formation from kidnapper, from kid child + obsolete napper thief] : to seize and confine or carry away by
Nappiness
The quality of having a nap abundance of nap as on cloth
Plush
A textile fabric with a nap or shag on one side longer and softer than the
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Shearing indicates
Shearing indicates, (a) cutting fleece from live sheep (b) Trimming nap or pile to the required uniform height, and (c) Removing
Kidnapping
Kidnapping [fr. kind, Dut., a child, and nap, to steal], the forcible abduction or stealing away of a
Snooze
A short sleep a nap
VerbarSiesta
the middle of the day or after dinner a midday nap
Shearing
a shearing machine as the wool from sheep or the nap from cloth
Shag
Coarse hair or nap rough woolly hair
Pile
the fiber of wool cotton and the like also the nap when thick or heavy as of carpeting and velvet
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