napkin 的定义
- a small piece of cloth or paper, usually square, for use in wiping the lips and fingers and to protect the clothes while eating.
- sanitary napkin.
- Chiefly British. a diaper.
- Scot. and North England. a handkerchief.
- Scot. a kerchief or neckerchief.
napkin 近义词
linen
更多napkin例句
- That these infinities are not the same was proved in the late 19th century by Georg Cantor in a manner so simple, you could sketch it out to your friends on a bar napkin.
- When Pat died there were boxes and suitcases full of neatly folded napkins.
- Few restaurants listen when you tell them you don’t need napkins and utensils.
- Also, I use way too many paper towels, so I bought cloth napkins and dish towels.
- Returning to his home in a clock tower he finds a number written on a napkin belonging to a love interest.
- And if trickle-down could start on a dinner napkin, surely the process of reversing its malignant effects can start with a book.
- She wrote down her phone number on a bar napkin and told him to call her sometime.
- Maple wrote down on a napkin strategies that he promised would cut homicides in half within two years.
- I went to accept the award, and I was still holding my dinner napkin in my hand.
- One of my favorite early memories at Facebook was planning the back-to-school campaign with Mike on the back of a napkin.
- He was quick to observe and nothing escaped him, from the improvised candlesticks to the napkin by his china plate.
- He remembered the log-house and his supper, when Mandy Ann served from a dinner-plate, and his napkin was a pocket handkerchief.
- It is well to carry in your pocket a small pincushion, and, having unfolded your napkin, to pin it at the belt.
- You may wipe off the worst of the spot with your napkin, and then let it pass without further notice.
- The table-cloth was full of stains, and, in lieu of a napkin, each guest was at liberty to use his handkerchief.