He had a really lame excuse for missing the birthday party.
1. disabled in the leg or foot. 2. (of an explanation or excuse) unconvincingly feeble. 3. (N. Amer. informal) pathetic or socially inept. 4. (verb) make lame
If someone is lame, they are unable to walk properly because of damage to one or both of their legs. He was aware that she was lame in one leg David had to pull out of the Championships when his horse went lame. The lame are people who are lame. the wounded and the lame of the last war
If you describe something, for example an excuse, argument, or remark, as lame, you mean that it is poor or weak. He mumbled some lame excuse about having gone to sleep All our theories sound pretty lame. = weak, feeble + lamely lame·ly `Lovely house,' I said lamely. A thin metal plate, especially one of the overlapping steel plates in medieval armor. to make a person or animal unable to walk properly = cripple
French for "trimmed with leaves of gold or silver" Fibre: Silk or any textile fibre in which metallic threads are used in the warp or the filling Lame is also a trademark for metallic yarns Weave: Usually a figured weave but could be any Characteristics: Often has pattern all over the surface The shine and glitter of this fabric makes it suitable for dressy wear The term comes from the French for "worked with gold and silver wire" Uses: Principally for evening wear
A user who behaves in a stupid or uneducated manner, a description often applied to newbies
This is a condition in which a horse does not carry weight equally on all four legs, due to disease or injury
Moving with pain or difficulty on account of injury, defect, or temporary obstruction of a function; as, a lame leg, arm, or muscle
{s} crippled, handicapped, disabled or deformed (especially of a leg or foot); injured, defective; ineffectual, unconvincing, weak; not fashionable, unsophisticated (Slang)