Comb
61comb through — ˌcomb ˈthrough [transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they comb through he/she/it combs through present participle combing through past tense …
62Comb-shaped — a. (Bot.) Pectinate. [1913 Webster] …
63comb binding — UK US noun [U] WORKPLACE ► a method of fastening pages into a book using a long curled piece of plastic cut to fit into holes in the pages: »A comb binding machine is an economical way to make professional looking documents …
64comb-over — «KOHM OH vuhr», noun a hairstyle made by parting the hair and sweeping it sideways over the top of the head, often to cover a bald spot: » He wears his black hair in an unruly comb over, and the dark, craggy features of his face set off a quick… …
65comb something out — ˌcomb sthˈout derived to pull a ↑comb through hair in order to make it neat or to remove knots from it Main entry: ↑combderived …
66comb shape — comb shape. См. форма [петушиного] гребня. (Источник: «Англо русский толковый словарь генетических терминов». Арефьев В.А., Лисовенко Л.А., Москва: Изд во ВНИРО, 1995 г.) …
67comb jelly — comb′ jel ly [[t]koʊm[/t]] n. ivt any marine invertebrate of the phylum Ctenophora, having an oval, transparent body with eight rows of comblike ciliated bands used for swimming Also called ctenophore • Etymology: 1885–90 …
68comb-over — comb o•ver [[t]ˈkoʊmˌoʊ vər[/t]] n. a hairstyle in which a central bald spot is covered with hair combed over from the side of the head • Etymology: [1980 85] …
69comb jelly — [kōm] n. CTENOPHORE …
70comb-foot|ed spider — «KOHM FUT ihd», any one of certain spiders having movable spines on the posterior legs, used to curl and bind the lines of silk coming from the spinnerets …