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Discover LudwigThe phrase "coarse cloth" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe fabric that is sturdy, usually made from fibers like cotton, jute, or linen. For example, "The tailor used coarse cloth to make the suit jacket, giving it a durable and rugged appearance."
Exact(17)
There is a coarse cloth spine lining.
To remove the residue, rub hard with a coarse cloth dipped into lacquer thinner or acetone.
It was covered with a coarse cloth, and flies were buzzing around it.
Many of the cheaper cotton items are of coarse cloth, well starched for a neat shelf appearance.
Three of the figures seem to be penitents; they are dressed in coarse cloth and wear religious symbols.
Agricultural products include fruits, grain, and tobacco; industry is limited to leatherworking, the manufacture of tobacco products, and the weaving and dyeing of coarse cloth.
Similar(43)
One narrator is cut from a coarser cloth than the others, and that's Eddie Chester, the Virginia banjo-player on a goodwill tour of the USSR in 'Licks of Love in the Heart of the Cold War'.
Paper mulberry (Broussonetia papyrifera), of the same family, has red globular fruit and an inner bark that yields a fibre used in the Orient for papermaking and in Polynesia for the manufacture of a coarse fabric called tapa cloth.
Bengal and Gujarat were the production centres for both coarse cloths and fine fabrics.
Find yourself a coarse material like a rough, thick cloth.
Contemporary coarse woven cloth photo album.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com