Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. Check out and contribute to the discussion of this word!

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word thirty-inch.

Examples

  • Nurse Joan then attached the Keppra to my IV and released the roller clamp on the thirty-inch piece of tubing to start the treatment.

    Chocolate & Vicodin Jennette Fulda 2011

  • Joan prepared the bags of medication by attaching a thirty-inch piece of tubing to each one.

    Chocolate & Vicodin Jennette Fulda 2011

  • Joan prepared the bags of medication by attaching a thirty-inch piece of tubing to each one.

    Chocolate & Vicodin Jennette Fulda 2011

  • Nurse Joan then attached the Keppra to my IV and released the roller clamp on the thirty-inch piece of tubing to start the treatment.

    Chocolate & Vicodin Jennette Fulda 2011

  • She hung it on the IV pole and inserted a thirty-inch piece of tubing into the bottom.

    Chocolate & Vicodin Jennette Fulda 2011

  • She hung it on the IV pole and inserted a thirty-inch piece of tubing into the bottom.

    Chocolate & Vicodin Jennette Fulda 2011

  • From ten to fifteen yards he could shoot a twenty- to thirty-inch arrow with such force that it would drive entirely through the carcass of a two-thousand-pound buffalo if it did not hit bone.

    EMPIRE OF THE SUMMER MOON S. C. Gwynne 2010

  • I was just releasing a thirty-inch, A-run fish when Vince came trotting around the upstream bend with his fourteen-foot rod bent deeply and an uncharacteristically worried look on his face.

    Fool’s Paradise John Gierach 2008

  • I was just releasing a thirty-inch, A-run fish when Vince came trotting around the upstream bend with his fourteen-foot rod bent deeply and an uncharacteristically worried look on his face.

    Fool’s Paradise John Gierach 2008

  • I was just releasing a thirty-inch, A-run fish when Vince came trotting around the upstream bend with his fourteen-foot rod bent deeply and an uncharacteristically worried look on his face.

    Fool’s Paradise John Gierach 2008

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.