WEAR vs DON: NOUN
- The act of wearing or using, or the state of being worn or used, as garments, ornaments, etc.; use: as, a garment not for every-day wear.
- The act of having on your person as a covering or adornment
- Impairment resulting from long use
- A covering designed to be worn on a person's body
- The ability to withstand impairment from use or attrition.
- Damage resulting from use or age.
- Clothing, especially of a particular kind or for a particular use. Often used in combination.
- The act of wearing or the state of being worn; use.
- An article or articles worn, or intended or fit to be worn; style of dress, adornment, or the like; hence, fashion; vogue.
- Stuff or material for articles of wear; material for garments, etc.
- Use; usage received in course of being worn or used; the impairment or diminution in bulk, value, efficiency, etc., which results from use, friction, time, or the like.
- A college or university professor.
- A head, tutor, or fellow at a college of Oxford or Cambridge.
- Used as a courtesy title before the name of a man in a Spanish-speaking area.
- Teacher at a university of college (especially at Cambridge or Oxford)
- The head of an organized crime family
- A Spanish title of respect for a gentleman or nobleman
- Celtic goddess; mother of Gwydion and Arianrhod; corresponds to Irish Danu
- A European river in southwestern Russia; flows into the Sea of Azov
- An important personage.
- In sea-fishing, a buoy used to mark a fishing-ground.
- [capitalized] A title in Spain and Italy prefixed to a man's Christian name, like Sir in Great Britain.
- A gentleman; a man bearing the title of or addressed as “Don.”
- Any person of high importance or leading position: applied ironically to one giving himself airs of importance.
- In Great Britain, a fellow of a college, or any college authority.
- Sir; Mr; Signior; -- a title in Spain, formerly given to noblemen and gentlemen only, but now common to all classes.
- A grand personage, or one making pretension to consequence; especially, the head of a college, or one of the fellows at the English universities.
- The leader of an organized-crime family.
- A university professor, particularly one at Oxford or Cambridge.
- A mafia boss.
- A Spanish gentleman or nobleman
- A Spanish courtesy title or form of address for men that is prefixed to the forename
WEAR vs DON: VERB
- Last and be usable
- Exhaust or tire through overuse or great strain or stress
- Go to pieces
- Be dressed in
- Put clothing on one's body
- Have on one's person
- Have or show an appearance of
- Deteriorate through use or stress
- Have in one's aspect; wear an expression of one's attitude or personality
- Put clothing on one's body
- To put on, to dress in
WEAR vs DON: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To come about with stern to windward.
- To pass gradually or tediously.
- To break down or diminish through use or attrition.
- To last through the passage of time.
- To make (a sailing ship) come about with the wind aft.
- To fatigue, weary, or exhaust.
- To bring to a specified condition by long use or attrition.
- To last under continual or hard use.
- To produce by constant use, attrition, or exposure.
- To damage, diminish, erode, or consume by long or hard use, attrition, or exposure. Often used with away, down, or off.
- To fly or display (colors). Used of a ship, jockey, or knight.
- To bear, carry, or maintain in a particular manner.
- To display in one's appearance.
- To carry or have habitually on one's person, especially as an aid.
- To carry or have on one's person as covering, adornment, or protection.
- N/A
WEAR vs DON: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To put on (clothing).
- To put on; to dress in; to invest one's self with.
- To assume or take on.
WEAR vs DON: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To undergo gradual impairment or diminution through use, attrition, or lapse of time; waste or diminish gradually; become obliterated: often with away, off, or out.
- To last or hold out in course of use or the lapse of time: generally with well or ill.
- To become fit or suitable by use; become accustomed.
- To be in fashion; be in common or recognized use.
- To harass; tire completely; fatigue; exhaust; waste or consume the strength of.
- Hence— To obliterate; efface.
- To waste or destroy by degrees; consume tediously: as, to wear out life in idle projects.
- To lay out; expend; spend; waste; squander. Compare ware.
- Have in one's aspect
- To disaccustom to one thing and accustom to another; bring gradually; lead: often with in or into before the new thing or state.
- To have or exhibit an appearance of; bear; carry; exhibit; show.
- To efface; obliterate.
- To cause or produce by constant percussion or attrition; form by continual rubbing: as, a constant current of water will wear a channel in stone.
- Hence To exhaust; weary; fatigue.
- To waste or impair by rubbing or attrition; lessen or diminish by continuous action upon; consume; waste; destroy by degrees.
- To consume by frequent or habitual use; deteriorate or waste by wear; use up: as, boots well worn.
- To use, affect, or be in the habit of using in one's costume or adornment: as, to wear green.
- To carry or bear on the body as a covering or an appendage for warmth, decency, ornament, or other use; put or have on: as, to wear fine clothes; to wear diamonds.
- Nautical, to bring (a vessel) on another tack by turning her with her head away from the wind; veer. Also ware.
- (idiom) (wear thin) To become less convincing, acceptable, or popular, as through repeated use.
- (idiom) (wear thin) To be weakened or eroded gradually.
- (idiom) (pants/trousers) To exercise controlling authority in a household.
- Flows into the Sea of Azov
- Corresponds to Irish Danu
- Mother of Gwydion and Arianrhod
- Celtic goddess
- To put on; invest with.
- (initialism) dissolved organic nitrogen
WEAR vs DON: RELATED WORDS
- Put on, Bear, Hold out, Weary, Break, Tire, Assume, Vesture, Fatigue, Endure, Clothes, Apparel, Clothing, Outwear, Don
- Gifted, Dom, Lon, Dona, Daniel, Godfather, Donald, Donate, Give, Don river, Get into, Preceptor, Put on, Assume, Wear
WEAR vs DON: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Have on, Get into, Bust, Jade, Put on, Bear, Weary, Break, Tire, Vesture, Fatigue, Endure, Clothes, Apparel, Outwear
- Dawn, Oka, Flair, Gifted, Dom, Lon, Dona, Daniel, Godfather, Donate, Give, Get into, Preceptor, Put on, Wear
WEAR vs DON: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- If you grow out of it or wear it out through fair wear and tear, you can get a free replacement.
- Clothes To Wear Home Your baby is going to need something to wear home, so plan accordingly.
- Remember, judges wear a red sash while justices of the peace wear a green sash.
- Tough Enough To Wear Pink, wear PINK to show your support for Breast Cancer Awareness!
- Most women in Egypt wear skinny jeans and flats, and a lot of young men wear jeans.
- If you wear glasses or contact lenses, you can wear them for the vision test as well.
- For example, Scottish advocates wear tail coats under their gowns, and wear white bow ties instead of bands.
- When checking tire pressure, examine the tires for wear, cuts, nicks, bruises and excessive wear.
- Wear with a different air unit patch guidance, may only for wear the military.
- Wear the same socks you wear during a walk.
- In most cases, our medical device and life sciences customers don bouffants first and then don shoe covers.
- But, Annie, women don t seem to like me at all, and I don t know why.
- Flagstaff city, so try searching all of Arizona: Don Wallace in Phoenix, Arizona, when it Don!
- DON deputy SIAO for Computer Network Defense reside within the office of the DON CIO.
- DON Deputy CIO managers in POCs, as applicable: DON CIO Lead, Mr.
- Una de Don Balandrano, recomendandole al Teniente de Caballeria Don Manuel Tarnava.
- So Jack Donaldson and Don Jackson would be returned, but Don Smith would not.
- Because the chemotherapy would make Don extremely weak, Don told Kirk that hewould have to step up and take over.
- Hauptmann Don Alvaro findet im Haus des wohlhabenden, von allen geachteten Bauern Don Pedro Crespo, freundliche Aufnahme.
- Por orden de los albaceas Don Rafael Ruiz y Don Pedro Lozano.
WEAR vs DON: QUESTIONS
- Should swimmers wear goggles when learning to swim?
- What kind of shoes do professional ballerinas wear?
- Should Ballet ballerinas wear gender neutral clothes?
- Why should healthcare staff wear hygienic uniforms?
- What do you wear to a wake, and what to wear to a funeral?
- Why do Manchester United wear red and Manchester City wear blue?
- Why do girls wear feminine clothes and boys wear masculine clothes?
- What is the best way to wear sweatpants for casual wear?
- What kind of jeans should you wear for everyday wear?
- Can you wear extended wear contact lenses at night?
- Why don't revolutions lead to representative democracies?
- Why don't paired electrons generate magnetic field?
- Why don't current institutions shape technological innovation?
- Why don't businesses care about immigration anymore?
- What Pokemon don't evolve with evolutionary stones?
- Why don't financial advisors succeed with seminars?
- Why don't college students learn digital photography?
- How many small businesses don't understand barcodes?
- What is the release date of Don't Breathe (2016) Don't Breathe?
- How does Don Giovanni kill the Commendatore in Don Giovanni?