Definition, Betydelse & Anagram | Engelska ordet CHEMISE


CHEMISE

Definition av CHEMISE

  1. damlinne

1

Antal bokstäver

7

Är palindrom

Nej

15
CH
CHE
EM
EMI
HE
HEM

7

1

10

295
CE
CEE
CEI
CEM


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Exempel på hur man kan använda CHEMISE i en mening

  • "Abbé du Prat" (pseudonym) – Venus in the Cloister; or, The Nun in her Smock (Vénus dans le cloître, ou la Religieuse en chemise).
  • Octagonal turrets on the chemise and caponiers at ground level provided flanking fire around the tower.
  • A type of undergarment worn close to the skin in order to protect outergarments, Women wore a shift or chemise under their gown or robe; while men wore a chemise with their trousers or braies, and covered the chemise with garments such as doublets, robes, etc.
  • She promises to give him what he wants (the poet makes no bones about the fact that he only wants her lîp, her body) provided he takes part in a joust wearing her chemise (underdress) instead of his armour.
  • Gray appropriated it as her own, saying that she had accidentally invented the shimmy while dancing at her father-in-law's Cudahy saloon and "shaking her chemise".
  • A one-piece undergarment which combined a camisole and knickers appeared in the 1910s under the name envelope chemise or chemi-knickers, soon referred to as camiknickers.
  • Cutty-sark (18th century Scots for a short chemise or undergarment) is a nickname given to Nannie, a fictional witch created by Robert Burns in his 1791 poem "Tam o' Shanter", after the garment she wore.
  • Swaddling was popular for a short period, but ankle-length white frocks and slip skirts for babies and crawling toddlers were popular around the 1500s since women wore ultra-fine muslin and chemise dresses in the 1700s, which looked remarkably similar to the attire worn by young children since the middle of the century.
  • A chemisette (from French, "little chemise") is an article of women's clothing worn to fill in the front and neckline of any garment.
  • In the early smocks the colours were meant to be impermanent and wash out, leaving the garment looking like a typical French artisan or labourer's chemise, and thus, hopefully, aiding the wearer's Escape and Evasion chances.
  • Close-fitting sleeves just past the elbow were trimmed with frills or ruffles, and separate under-ruffles referred to as engageantes in modern terms, of lace or fine linen were tacked, to the inside of the gown's sleeves, or perhaps to the shift or chemise sleeves.
  • Caroline Amalie of Augustenburg wears a green pinafore dress over a white blouse or a chemise with a ruffled collar.
  • A daring new fashion arose for having one's portrait painted in undress, wearing a loosely fastened gown called a nightgown over a voluminous chemise, with tousled curls.
  • American fashion trends emulated French dress, but in a toned-down manner, with shawls and tunics to cope with the sheerness of the chemise.
  • The kirtle was typically worn over a chemise or smock, which acted as a slip, and under the formal outer garment, a gown or surcoat.
  • Dress red stuff bodice patched under arms and sleeves with marone one black and one marone stockings brown stuff skirt kilted brown lindsey petticoat, white chemise and apron, paisley shawl.
  • Women's fashions of the 15th century consisted of a long gown, usually with sleeves, worn over a kirtle or undergown, with a linen chemise or smock worn next to the skin.
  • Dentist Henry Parkhouse (Lynne Overman) and his wife Minerva (Spring Byington) have a perfect marriage until a practical joke backfires and she finds a lady's chemise in his coat pocket.
  • Pious couples were expected to use chemise cagoules at every lovemaking session, and thus would never see each other naked.
  • This notion that the predestined hero are born "in a chemise" does not refer to them literally wearing articles of clothing; rather, these are babies born with their heads covered in caul, or amniotic membrane.


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