felt

felt - noun

  • A cloth made of wool and fur often mixed with natural or synthetic fibers through the action of heat, moisture, chemicals, and pressure
  • A firm woven cloth of wool or cotton heavily napped and shrunk
  • An article made of felt
  • A heavy paper of organic or asbestos fibers impregnated with asphalt and used in building construction
Source: Merriam-Webster Dictionary API

Usage examples

Examples: "I can see the felt from here." "That felt belongs to me." "The felt is very important."

felt - thesaurus

Synonyms: saw

SpellingJoy score for felt

SpellingJoy Gematria

📚 Apprentice
79

Letter Values

F
9
E
5
L
13
T
23

Etymology

Middle English felt, felte, feelte, going back to Old English felt (only in glosses), going back to West Germanic *felt-, *filt-, probably from a neuter s-stem paradigm *feltaz-/*filtiz- (whence also Old Saxon filt "coarse woolen cloth, blanket," Middle Dutch vilt, vilte, velt "felt," Old High German filz "coarse woolen cloth, felt cover"), of uncertain origin