GLOSS OVER vs WHITEWASH: NOUN
- N/A
- A defeat in which the losing person or team fails to score
- Wash consisting of lime and size in water; used for whitening walls and other surfaces
- A mixture of lime and water, often with whiting, size, or glue added, that is used to whiten walls, fences, or other structures.
- Concealment or palliation of flaws or failures.
- A defeat in a game in which the loser scores no points.
- A wash or loose superficial deposit of white boulders and pebbles of quartz and sericite-schist which appears on the hillsides above the gold-bearing creeks of the Klondike and is itself auriferous. See the extract.
- A wash or liquid composition for whitening something.
- False coloring, as of character, alleged services, etc.; the covering up of wrong-doing or defects: as, the investigating committee applied a thick coat of whitewash.
- In base-ball and other games, a contest in which one side fails to score.
- A specious or deceptive clearing that attempts to gloss over failings and defects
- A complete victory or series of victories without suffering any losses; a clean sweep.
- A lime and water mixture for painting walls and fences bright white.
- A glossing over or cover up (of crimes or misfeasance).
- A composition of line and water, or of whiting size, and water, or the like, used for whitening walls, ceilings, etc.; milk of lime.
- A composition of quicklime and water, or, for more careful work, of whiting, size, and water, used for whitening the plaster of walls, woodwork, etc., or as a freshening coating for any surface. It is not used for fine work.
- Any wash or liquid composition for whitening something, as a wash for making the skin fair.
GLOSS OVER vs WHITEWASH: VERB
- To treat something with less care than it deserves; to skimp.
- To cover up a mistake or a crime; to hush up or whitewash.
- Treat hurriedly or avoid dealing with properly
- Cover up a misdemeanor, fault, or error
- Cover up a misdemeanor, fault, or error
- Exonerate by means of a perfunctory investigation or through biased presentation of data
- Cover with whitewash
- To paint over with a lime and water mixture so as to brighten up a wall or fence.
- To cover over errors or bad actions.
- To prevent a team from scoring any runs.
- To choose white film or television actors to portray characters that were Asian, African, or other races.
GLOSS OVER vs WHITEWASH: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To apply a white liquid composition to; to whiten with whitewash.
- To make white; to give a fair external appearance to; to clear from imputations or disgrace; hence, to clear (a bankrupt) from obligation to pay debts.
- In various games, to defeat (an opponent) so that he fails to score, or to reach a certain point in the game; to skunk.
- To gloss over or cover up (crimes or misfeasance).
- To defeat (an opponent) in a game in which the opponent does not score.
- To conceal or gloss over (wrongdoing, for example).
- To paint or coat with whitewash.
GLOSS OVER vs WHITEWASH: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- To cover with a white liquid composition, as with lime and water, etc.
- To make white; give a fair external appearance to; attempt to clear from imputations; attempt to restore the reputation of.
- To clear by a judicial process (an insolvent or bankrupt) of the debts he owes.
- In base-ball, etc., to beat in a game in which the opponents fail to score.
- To become coated with a white inflorescence, as some bricks.
GLOSS OVER vs WHITEWASH: RELATED WORDS
- Trivialize, Sentimentalization, Oversimplify, Gloze, Superficialize, Sugarcoat, Temporise, Platitudinize, Smooth over, Slur over, Sleek over, Skimp over, Skate over, Hush up, Whitewash
- Glorification, Conceal, Wash, Clear, Hide, Bleaching, Embellish, Glorify, Prettify, Exonerate, Hush up, Gloss over, Sleek over, Vindication, Exoneration
GLOSS OVER vs WHITEWASH: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Underplay, Lead on, Ununderstood, Romanticize, Miscomprehend, Lead astray, Trivialize, Sentimentalization, Oversimplify, Gloze, Superficialize, Temporise, Platitudinize, Smooth over, Hush up
- Disguise, Rinse, Laundering, Camouflage, Glorification, Conceal, Wash, Clear, Hide, Bleaching, Embellish, Glorify, Prettify, Hush up, Gloss over
GLOSS OVER vs WHITEWASH: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- You might be tempted to gloss over any sort of reasoning in favor of getting your rejection over as soon as possible.
- Sometimes, it is easy to gloss over Bible stories.
- Casting Friends can gloss over a short social encounter.
- This is a section that many people gloss over.
- Too often, Riley said, proponents gloss over such concerns.
- This passage is complex and easy to gloss over.
- But the reviews of smartphone cameras gloss over it.
- Consumers gloss over disclosure forms all the time.
- Publications or web sites gloss over hard reality.
- By all means gloss over the unflattering things.
- There will be no whitewash in the White House.
- SABC news to whitewash what was really going down.
- European politicians to whitewash constitutional vote in Russia.
- Handmade Box is painted with a whitewash effect.
- In this way, can you whitewash over lacquer?
- Tom Sawyer, then you are familiar with whitewash.
- This can be done instead then whitewash it.
- Signature Design By Ashley Enderton Whitewash Accent Ta.
- Accent your home decor with Whitewash Wood Letters.
- Hero of a series of novels by Harold Weissburg, including Whitewash, Whitewash II, Photographic Whitewash, and Oswald in New Orleans.
GLOSS OVER vs WHITEWASH: QUESTIONS
- What happens if you put oil based gloss over satin paint?
- Can England avoid an Ashes whitewash in fourth Test?
- How do her prophets whitewash these deeds for them?
- Does Vanitha whitewash Dileep's image on the cover?
- Did Netflix whitewash the Winx Club live-action adaptation?
- What primer should I use to whitewash laminate flooring?
- Did PACC Commissioner Greco Belgica whitewash investigation on DFPC?
- What is a whitewash waiver under the takeovers code?
- Why was whitewash paint so popular in colonial times?
- Is'Playful Kiss'a whitewash of toxic relationships?
- Does the Bible whitewash our experience of suffering?