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Wiktionary英語版での「millineric」の意味 |
millineric
形容詞
millineric (comparative more millineric, superlative most millineric)
- Of or relating to women’s hats.
- 1880 March 31, Mary Wager-Fisher, “The Doctrine of a Church Bonnet”, in The Christian Union, volume XXI, number 13, New York, N.Y.: the N. Y. and Brooklyn Publishing Co., Limited, page 304:
- Mrs X⸺ sat in front of me, and there was a wreath on her bonnet so provokingly like the real flowers that I could look at nothing else and think of nothing else but the wonderful skill attained to in their manufacture; my thoughts danced a jig half over the world, started and kept in motion by that millineric creation.
- 1893 April 22, “Modistes and Milliners”, in The Daily Telegraph, number 11,836, London, page 4:
- Well, there is next Saturday, when we will hope to say much of these if the sunshine and the white butterflies in and out through the young green foliage continue to inspire summerlike aspirations for millineric matters.
- 1894 April 7, “Dress of the Day”, in The Daily Telegraph, number 12,136, London, page 3:
- There is an aquatic green which is just now the rage, and which is seen in dresses in conjunction with black, white, tan, or brown; the best millineric form of it is in watercress, with which humble product the brims of some exceedingly smart bonnets are trimmed, while the same green is also seen in rosettes of river-grass cleverly simulated.
- 1895 November 16, “Dress of the Day”, in The Daily Telegraph, number 12,640, London, page 9:
- Tulle is quite the correct thing to wear in the evening, alike for maids and matrons. The former wear it in all its fluffy, fairylike, poetic prettiness; the latter use it as trimming. Either way it is charming and a change from chiffon, the perishable fabric that promises to be everlasting, which is a millineric paradox.
- 1896 May 11, “Costumes for the Czar’s Coronation”, in The Belfast News-Letter, volume CLIX, number 25,218, Belfast, page 6:
- St. Petersburg will also catch a glimpse of millineric glories;
- 1897 February 20, “Dress of the Day”, in The Belfast News-Letter, volume CLX, number 25,460, Belfast, page 7:
- Naturally, only for such important events is anything divulged so early, but these gowns are of such rich and costly character that it would be millineric tragedy to find them even slightly behind the times when functions of the greatest brilliance demanded their re-entry later on, without the magnificent train worn on State occasions.
- 1897 March 18, “Latest Fashions”, in The Cornishman, volume XIX, number 976, Penzance, page 3:
- French Dress was made a fetish to us years ago when the Empress of the French was leader of fashion. Now things are changed, and although it would be unfair and untrue to deny French taste and eye for colour and style a leading place in matters millineric, yet we have discovered that we Englishwomen have characteristics of face and figure that render French fashions unsuitable to us.
- 1898, The Cambridge Review, page 400:
- The reasonable man allows for and enjoys verbal embroidery as much as the lady does the millineric variety of the article.
- 1911 April 16, “Tales of the Town Told in a Few Lines: Pencil Stubs Picked Up at Random”, in Americus Times-Recorder[8], thirty-third year, number 91, Americus, Ga.:
- The auto parade this afternoon will be next in importance only to the millineric pageant moving majestically in Easteric magnificence.
- 1920 October 30, The Illustrated London News, volume 157, number 4254, page 706:
- In spite (writes “A. E. L.”) of the efforts of many enterprising amateur designers, urged by the plaints of a daily paper that the head-covering of man was sadly out of date, and that our great male minority were awaiting breathlessly something new, neat, light, and becoming, created by millineric genius for their benefit, I can see no change.
- 1994, Raymond Earl Jennings, “What Does Disjunction do?”, in The Genealogy of Disjunction, New York, N.Y.; Oxford: Oxford University Press, part 1 (The Story of ‘Or’), section 3 (Antecedents of Russell’s Formulation), page 37:
- In his reply, Ryle swaps Mabbott’s (now bivalent) railway signal for Mrs. Smith’s (multivalent) hat and restates Mabbott’s position in the millineric idiom: . . . “Mrs. Smith’s hat is not green” presupposes, you say, that Mrs. Smith’s hat is some-colour-or-other, i.e., “Mrs. Smith’s hat is not green” is nonsense unless it is true that the hat is either red or blue or green or yellow . . . But that is just the point. It is not true. A particular hat can not have a disjunctive colouring or hover between alternatives. If it is e.g., blue, then it isn’t any other colour, and so there is no “either-or” about it at all. (90–91)
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millinerial
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