batwing
nounEtymology
From bat + wing.
- derived from *wēingijaz✻
- derived from vængr
- inherited from winge
Definitions
The wing of a bat, or its shape.
- The junk was nearer, beating in toward the island, her brown batwing sail suddenly tall and terribly conspicuous against the sky.
- His batwings were somehow more frightening for being the pathetic broken floundering things they were than if they had been strong, muscular beaters of the air.
Several South or Southeast Asian species of tailless dark swallowtail butterflies in the…
Several South or Southeast Asian species of tailless dark swallowtail butterflies in the genus Atrophaneura.
An area of flabby fat under a person's arms.
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A long sleeve with a deep armhole, tapering toward the wrist.
One of a pair of swinging doors which typically do not lock nor cover the full vertical…
One of a pair of swinging doors which typically do not lock nor cover the full vertical range of the doorway (leaving a large gap at the top and bottom), common especially in saloons.
- The cantina was a flatroofed adobe, painfully white in the unrelenting sun, with a brush roof and splintery batwings. The doors swung back and forth as a man stepped before them and stood beneath the brush arbor, staring at Navarro,[…]
- He made it to the saloon undetected and slipped under the batwing and over to the table where he had left his saddlebags. They weren't there. Fargo ran his hands over the top of the table to be sure, and swore.
- A tall figure stepped up to the batwing doors of the saloon as Tommy and Matt passed.
A heart-shaped rollercoaster feature with two inversions.
An exercise or posture on the stomach wherein a dumbbell row or lateral raise is…
An exercise or posture on the stomach wherein a dumbbell row or lateral raise is performed.
The neighborhood
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for batwing. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA