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I learned a new word today: trilby, which is a particular kind of hat. Link The book I am reading was written by an English author, and this word is "chiefly British." Is it used much in England? The hat, from the Wikipedia description, seems a bit fiddly:
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Hats generally aren't worn as much nowadays as previously but trilby is a fairly common word. My father had three of them. As for the definition I suspect that any definition of a particular item of clothing that attempts to actually describe it would be just as fiddly. For example, just off the top of my head if I try to describe T-shirt so that it can accurately be identified by someone who has never seen one I might get something like
Or I could just go with "short-sleeved, buttonless shirt" which is close enough but doesn't necessarily give an accurate description. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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I knew there was also a novel called Trilby, but wasn't certain of the connection between the two. Wikipedia says: "The hat's name derives from the stage adaptation of George du Maurier's 1894 novel Trilby; a hat of this style was worn in the first London production of the play, and promptly came to be called 'a Trilby hat'." | |||
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Bob, good point about the t-shirt. I looked up blouse, and here is what it says in Wikipedia: I realize that "blouses over" is a phrase sometimes used, but many women blouses are not loose these days. | |||
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