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gaberdine การใช้

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  • I had this edition that glossed " gaberdines " as " pants ", which confused me.
  • Hip-hugging designs in wool, gaberdine and corduroy have helped make the trend weather-proof.
  • As the rain comes, Trinculo gets under Caliban's cloak ( a gaberdine overcoat / cloak ).
  • For this designer, that meant wool gaberdine, wool jersey and a wool that had been given a puckered texture.
  • Pants Ant is the main hero of the town of Gaberdine in Pantsylvania, where everything revolves around pants and lower body clothing.
  • Women of all ages have bought into the trend now that low-rise styles have grown to include wool, gaberdine and khaki.
  • In later centuries " gaberdine " was used colloquially for any protective overgarment, including labourers'smock-frocks and children's pinafores.
  • Thomas Blount's " Glossographia " of 1656 defined a gaberdine as " A rough Irish mantle or horseman's cloak, a long cassock ".
  • As the storm resumes and thunder sounds, Trinculo is forced into the nearest shelter, which happens to be Caliban's gaberdine ( a loose-fitting cloak ).
  • Ruth-Marie ( Stewart ) Rudemacher, today a resident of Springfield, finished 11th in the downnhill /-slalom combined wearing a billowing gaberdine ski suit, courtesy of Bloomingdales, that fit like a deployed parachute.
  • This was of great benefit for the likes of our long term supporter / life member Alan Heany, who never missed a game for so many years and was always a welcome sight rugged up in his traditional hat and gaberdine overcoat.
  • During the 1960s, there was great enthusiasm for plastic and paper garments as futuristic clothing such as plastic raincoats, which were far lighter and cheaper than mackintoshes or gaberdine raincoats, and could also be manufactured in bright colours or made transparent or translucent.
  • In the 15th and early 16th centuries, " gaberdine " ( variously spelled "'gawbardyne, gawberdyne, gabarden, gaberdin, gabberdine "') signified a fashionable overgarment, but by the 1560s it was associated with coarse garments worn by the poor.
  • In " The Merchant of Venice ", William Shakespeare uses the phrase " Jewish gaberdine " to describe the garment worn by Shylock, and the term " gaberdine " has been subsequently used to refer to the overgown or mantle worn by Jews in the medieval era.
  • In " The Merchant of Venice ", William Shakespeare uses the phrase " Jewish gaberdine " to describe the garment worn by Shylock, and the term " gaberdine " has been subsequently used to refer to the overgown or mantle worn by Jews in the medieval era.
  • A 19th-century traveler observed : " I have seen a little fellow of six years old, with a troop of fat toddlers of only three and four, teaching [ them ] to throw stones at a Jew, and one little urchin would, with the greatest coolness, waddle up to the man and literally spit upon his Jewish gaberdine.
  • Morris quotes a 19th-century traveler : " I have seen a little fellow of six years old, with a troop of fat toddlers of only three and four, teaching [ them ] to throw stones at a Jew, and one little urchin would, with the greatest coolness, waddle up to the man and literally spit upon his Jewish gaberdine.