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词汇 fustanella
释义

Definition of fustanella in English:

fustanella

noun ˌfʌstəˈnɛləˌfəstəˈnɛlə
  • A stiff white kilt, worn by men in Albania and Greece.

    (阿尔巴尼亚和希腊男子穿的)硬褶白短裙

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The kilt they wear is called a fustanella and were worn by the klephts, the freedom fighters who fought the Turks in the war for Independence.
    • We also hear of the fustanella, a white skirt once worn by Greek men.
    • This dress uniform includes tasseled cap and shoes, white stockings and the fustanella, a shirtwaist with pleated skirt of white fustian.
    • The village was astir for the duties of the day, white fustanellas were hurrying in every direction toward the fields.
    • I remember a dude named Charlie something who got into trouble here a couple years ago because someone thought he wanted to make a couple of bucks offering fustanellas.
    • Soldiers in their various uniforms strolled along the promenade, mingling with Greeks from the mountains in their long white pleated skirts they call the fustanella.
    • He did have a Sunday-best fustanella but hardly ever wore it.
    • This approach involves wearing unbifurcated clothing - such as Scottish or Irish kilts, Greek fustanellas, or the robes, caftans, or sarongs of other countries - as an expression of one's ethnic pride or in connection with ethnic celebrations or activities.
    • The ‘black-kara’ its seems to exist since they wore black fustanellas and the tradition says that they started to wear black after the fall of Polis when they started to flee to Agrafa mountains to escape from the slavery.
    • Early photographs of the workmen (some wearing fustanellas, pleated white skirts) and archaeologists (some in hats and gloves) show them suitably awed by their labors.
    • There were Christian Albanians with their white fustanellas, high aquiline nose, glittering eyes, and false smile, in dress somewhat similar to the Morlacchi, but wearing a smaller fez with a long blue tassel.
    • Towards the end of the parade came the Greek Revolution of 1821, which began to carve a modern Greek state out of the Ottoman empire, featuring national independence fighters in their traditional costumes and fustanellas.
    • He must have seemed considerably odder when at seventeen - full of incoherent dreams of the War of Independence - he adopted the full national costume, fustanella and all, which he never abandoned.
    • The cavalieri in their white fustanellas and their dames dance the lively carnival dances in the squares and along the streets.
    • His name was often appended to the titles of foreign corps that fought for Britain in the Napoleonic period: amongst them was the Duke of York's Greek Light Infantry which wore the kilt-like fustanella now sported by the evzones.
    • The guards at the Palace are called evzones, and wear those absurd little skirts that the Greeks call fustanellas.
    • Especially on Greek Independence day one can see pictures of Greek men in fustanellas.
    • The fustanella, or Albanian kilt, was common dress for men until the 1400s. Common villagers and rural people wore a fustanella made from coarse linen or wool; more affluent men wore silk.
    • A style of male dress most often seen in the United States is the fustanella, a full, white pleated skirt; a black and gold jacket; a red flat fez with a large tassel (puskel); and shoes with black pompoms.
    • He was standing on a little hill with a couple of his generals and saw the Albanians in their white kilts, their fustanellas, approaching.

Origin

Mid 19th century: from Italian, from modern Greek phoustani, phoustanela, probably from Italian fustagno, from medieval Latin fustaneum (see fustian).

Definition of fustanella in US English:

fustanella

nounˌfəstəˈnɛləˌfəstəˈnelə
  • A stiff white kilt, worn by men in Albania and Greece.

    (阿尔巴尼亚和希腊男子穿的)硬褶白短裙

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The village was astir for the duties of the day, white fustanellas were hurrying in every direction toward the fields.
    • Especially on Greek Independence day one can see pictures of Greek men in fustanellas.
    • I remember a dude named Charlie something who got into trouble here a couple years ago because someone thought he wanted to make a couple of bucks offering fustanellas.
    • This approach involves wearing unbifurcated clothing - such as Scottish or Irish kilts, Greek fustanellas, or the robes, caftans, or sarongs of other countries - as an expression of one's ethnic pride or in connection with ethnic celebrations or activities.
    • This dress uniform includes tasseled cap and shoes, white stockings and the fustanella, a shirtwaist with pleated skirt of white fustian.
    • Soldiers in their various uniforms strolled along the promenade, mingling with Greeks from the mountains in their long white pleated skirts they call the fustanella.
    • The fustanella, or Albanian kilt, was common dress for men until the 1400s. Common villagers and rural people wore a fustanella made from coarse linen or wool; more affluent men wore silk.
    • He was standing on a little hill with a couple of his generals and saw the Albanians in their white kilts, their fustanellas, approaching.
    • A style of male dress most often seen in the United States is the fustanella, a full, white pleated skirt; a black and gold jacket; a red flat fez with a large tassel (puskel); and shoes with black pompoms.
    • The cavalieri in their white fustanellas and their dames dance the lively carnival dances in the squares and along the streets.
    • Towards the end of the parade came the Greek Revolution of 1821, which began to carve a modern Greek state out of the Ottoman empire, featuring national independence fighters in their traditional costumes and fustanellas.
    • The kilt they wear is called a fustanella and were worn by the klephts, the freedom fighters who fought the Turks in the war for Independence.
    • The guards at the Palace are called evzones, and wear those absurd little skirts that the Greeks call fustanellas.
    • We also hear of the fustanella, a white skirt once worn by Greek men.
    • There were Christian Albanians with their white fustanellas, high aquiline nose, glittering eyes, and false smile, in dress somewhat similar to the Morlacchi, but wearing a smaller fez with a long blue tassel.
    • He did have a Sunday-best fustanella but hardly ever wore it.
    • Early photographs of the workmen (some wearing fustanellas, pleated white skirts) and archaeologists (some in hats and gloves) show them suitably awed by their labors.
    • His name was often appended to the titles of foreign corps that fought for Britain in the Napoleonic period: amongst them was the Duke of York's Greek Light Infantry which wore the kilt-like fustanella now sported by the evzones.
    • The ‘black-kara’ its seems to exist since they wore black fustanellas and the tradition says that they started to wear black after the fall of Polis when they started to flee to Agrafa mountains to escape from the slavery.
    • He must have seemed considerably odder when at seventeen - full of incoherent dreams of the War of Independence - he adopted the full national costume, fustanella and all, which he never abandoned.

Origin

Mid 19th century: from Italian, from modern Greek phoustani, phoustanela, probably from Italian fustagno, from medieval Latin fustaneum (see fustian).

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