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fluff-dry English

Meaning fluff-dry meaning

What does fluff-dry mean?

fluff-dry

(transitive) To tumble-dry without heat, resulting in a softer texture.

Examples fluff-dry examples

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News and current affairs

Only when more parents, teachers, and community leaders behave likewise will recruitment of terrorists dry up and law-enforcement authorities receive full cooperation from the populations they police.
Flags are flown in hope of victory, but also serve to dry the tears of defeat.
One morning, I was taken to a dry riverbed at the village's edge.
They explained that until recently this was a perennial river - one that flows throughout the year - but now the river stops flowing during the dry season.
Deserts and dry regions are becoming drier.
If water can be managed through irrigation, this could be combined with multi-cropping (multiple harvests per year) to produce a crop during the dry season.
Such costs are precisely why impecunious countries such as Greece face massive social and economic displacement when financial markets lose confidence and capital flows suddenly dry up.
There are families today near Xian, in what was the heartland of the Tang Dynasty Empire, with two-acre dry wheat farms and a single goat.
Norway would be able to sell its hydropower and secure a backup supply should climate change leave it running dry.
Americans eat more often in restaurants, make ample use of laundry, dry-cleaning, and shopping services, and hire nannies to take care of young infants.
The immediate cause of this disaster is clear: the rains have failed for two years running in the dry regions of East Africa.
Deposits of hot dry rocks are common, and large amounts of heat are within reach in many places.
AMSTERDAM - In the Mekong Delta, farmers obtain 6-7 tons of rice per hectare in dry seasons and 4-5 tons per hectare in wet seasons, using fast-maturing rice varieties that allow up to three consecutive yields annually.
Although precipitation may be affected, higher temperatures would enable agricultural production in colder regions, and CO2 is known to bolster plant growth, even in dry areas.
The standard daily ration is 150-300 grams (5-10 ounces) of corn or rice (equivalent to roughly four slices of dry bread), depending on the location.
Others, including those that were becoming the new frontier in emerging markets, may see their access to foreign capital dry up.
Relatively prosperous Europeans tend not to purchase a car merely to get from point A to point B, shoes to keep their feet dry, a watch just to tell the time, or a bottle of water only to quench their thirst.
As a result, intra-European trade and support for European institutions, having soared in the previous two decades, began to decline practically before the ink on the Maastricht Treaty was dry.
Such efforts, Zheng reports, have involved some 6,533 cannons, 5,939 rocket launchers, and numerous aircraft in an attempt to seed clouds across one-third of China's landmass with dry ice, ammonia, and silver iodide.
America's traditional sources of influence - its soft power, regional alliances, and financial leverage - appear to be running dry.

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