wad meaning:
n.) A little mass, tuft, or bundle of
n.) A soft mass used for various purposes, as for stopping an aperture, padding a garment, etc.
v. t.) To form a bundle, to compress into a mass
a roll of paper money
wad sentence:
I wadded up the paper towel and hit him on the head.
The shop assistant placed the lamps in a box with wadded paper.
He wadded up the picture and threw it at me.
The nurse pressed the wadded pad to the wound.
The put wads of newspaper in the package to prevent any damage to the vase.
She was chewing a wad of gum.
I jumped and squealed into my wadded panties.
He was carrying a wad of newspapers to hit the boys.
The jacket has a wadded lining for extra warmth.
Don’t carry huge wads of cash.
I wasted a wad of money on food!
I wadded up his letter and threw in the trash.
Police found cartridges and wadding at the scene.
She was working on TV and had wads of money.
Breakable toys like models or porcelain dolls can be wrapped in extra clothes and pack in wadded newspaper.
He wadded up the torn sleeve he’d cut away, placed it over the wound and placed Sam’s left hand firmly over the top of it.
The woman handed her a wad of cash, ran back to the car, and drove off.
He’s holding what appears to be a wad of cash, including at least one $100 bill.
Place the bags in a box and secure them with packing material or wadded newspaper.
Synthetic sleeping bags are insulated with layers of insulating wadding.
Doing this can save you wads of cash.
Most kids toys are non-breakable and can go in boxes with wadded newspaper or clothes to fill spaces.
If they still fit loosely in their individual boxes, fill in the spaces with lightly wadded newspaper.
I was amazed by the great wads of dust, fluff and mummified insects which have accumulated within.
Kneeling there, holding the two wads of material to his partner’s bleeding injuries, he looked up, and saw Celeste standing over them.
Laurence was too busy counting his wads of cash behind closed doors.