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“dusting”
dust (verb), dusts; dusted; dusting
1. To make something clear, or cleaner, by brushing or wiping dirt from the surface of something: The cleaning lady dusted the tables, bookshelves, etc. at least once a week.
When Christa comes back from the beach, she always dusts the sand off her legs before she goes into her house.
2. To cover something with a fine powder: The police dusted the table and chairs for fingerprints.William's mother usually dusts the cake with powdered sugar.
The farmer is dusting his crops with a pesticide.
3. Etymology: from about 1200, "to rise as dust"; later it came to mean both "to sprinkle with dust" and "to rid of dust". The meaning, "to kill" is a U.S. slang term that was first recorded 1938; such as, "he was known to bite the dust as a result of the auto accident".
This entry is located in the following unit:
English Words in Action, Group D
(page 5)
1. The process of making something clean by brushing or wiping away the fine layer of dirt from the surface of something: The table needs a good dusting and the shelves need a good dusting, too.
2. A small amount of something which falls over a surface: Today there was a light dusting of snow on the ground.
2. A small amount of something which falls over a surface: Today there was a light dusting of snow on the ground.
This entry is located in the following unit:
English Words in Action, Group D
(page 6)