wove in the Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

Translations for wove in the English»French Dictionary (Go to French»English)

wove [Brit wəʊv, Am woʊv] VB pt

wove → weave

See also weave

I.weave [Brit wiːv, Am wiv] N

II.weave <pret wove or weaved, pp woven or weaved> [Brit wiːv, Am wiv] VB trans

III.weave <pret wove, or weaved; pp woven or weaved> [Brit wiːv, Am wiv] VB intr

I.weave [Brit wiːv, Am wiv] N

II.weave <pret wove or weaved, pp woven or weaved> [Brit wiːv, Am wiv] VB trans

III.weave <pret wove, or weaved; pp woven or weaved> [Brit wiːv, Am wiv] VB intr

Translations for wove in the French»English Dictionary (Go to English»French)

wove in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for wove in the English»French Dictionary (Go to French»English)

I.weave <wove [or a. Am weaved], woven> [wi:v] VB trans

II.weave <wove [or a. Am weaved], woven> [wi:v] VB intr

Translations for wove in the French»English Dictionary (Go to English»French)

wove Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Initially printed on white wove paper, the stamps switched to granite paper in 1881.
en.wikipedia.org
She plucked all the hairs out of her belly (hence the lack of hair on a woodchuck's belly) and wove them into a magical bag.
en.wikipedia.org
They wove high quality mohair goods among others.
en.wikipedia.org
The earliest examples of wove paper, bearing his watermark, appeared after 1740.
en.wikipedia.org
The show wove the band's songs into a narrative involving a giant bee.
en.wikipedia.org
Hundreds of women wove clothing used by the soldiers.
en.wikipedia.org
So, in like manner, they spun and wove their own garments from the undyed wool of their own sheep.
en.wikipedia.org
In her early days, black revolutionary themes and cuss words wove through some poems.
en.wikipedia.org
Their business, is credited with the invention of the wove wire mesh used to mould and align the pulp fibres.
en.wikipedia.org
He and his people wove clothes and sold them in places where festivals were held.
en.wikipedia.org

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