| drape | place casually; "The cat draped herself on the sofa" | en |
| drape | cover or dress loosely with cloth; "drape the statue with a sheet | en |
| drape | cover or dress loosely with cloth; "drape the statue with a sheet" | en |
| drape | a sterile covering arranged over a patient's body during a medical examination or during surgery in order to reduce the possibility of contamination | en |
| drape | hanging cloth used as a blind (especially for a window) | en |
| drape | the manner in which fabric hangs or falls; "she adjusted the drape of her skirt" | en |
| drape | arrange in a particular way; "drape a cloth" | en |
| drape | a sterile covering arranged over a patient's body during a medical examination or during surgery in order to reduce the possibility of contamination the manner in which fabric hangs or falls; "she adjusted the drape of her skirt" | en |
| drape | To cover or adorn with drapery or folds of cloth, or as with drapery; as, to drape a bust, a building, etc | en |
| drape | To design drapery, arrange its folds, etc., as for hangings, costumes, statues, etc | en |
| drape | To rail at; to banter | en |
| drape | To make cloth | en |
| drape | as for hangings, costumes, statues, etc | en |
| drape | To design drapery, arrange its folds, etc | en |
| drape | The ability of prepreg to conform to the shape of a contoured surface | en |
| drape | To betray a body to the Hardheads "Kig had better not drape me now that I've told him all about our plan " | en |
| drape | Drapes are pieces of heavy fabric that you hang from the top of a window and can close to keep the light out or stop people looking in | en |
| drape | Involves laying features over a digital terrain model to provide information on features that lie on the terrain The terrain model provides the shape of the terrain Draped features may then include a satellite image of the terrain to show land use, and vector data to show features such as roads | en |
| drape | If you drape a part of your body somewhere, you lay it there in a relaxed and graceful way. Nicola slowly draped herself across the couch He draped his arm over Daniels' shoulder | en |
| drape | If someone or something is draped in a piece of cloth, they are loosely covered by it. The coffin had been draped in a Union Jack He draped himself in the Canadian flag and went round the track | en |
| drape | curtain, drapery; manner in which something drapes and hangs in folds isim | en |
| drape | If you drape a piece of cloth somewhere, you place it there so that it hangs down in a casual and graceful way. Natasha took the coat and draped it over her shoulders She had a towel draped around her neck. = hang | en |
| drape | The ability of a prepreg to conform to the shape of a contoured surface | en |
| drape | A fabric's ability to fold, hang, and move about | en |
| drape | The way a fabric hangs (on a body) This fabric drapes beautifully | en |
| drape | The hang or the fall of the fabric | en |
| drape | A group of patterns which resemble curtain drapes Usually created by moving a wavey pattern in carefully defined variable moves to create a curved appearence which is repeated to give the drape effect See also Moiré | en |
| drape | How clothing flows vertically, according to gravitational forces The more natural and unwrinkled the clothing looks from head to toe, the better the drape | en |
| drape | A dance position in which the woman reclines over the man's knee or thigh with at least one of her skates on the ice | en |
| drape | cover with cloth, adorn with drapery; hang or stretch out loosely; arrange in graceful folds fiil | en |