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attire

/uh-tahyuhr/US // əˈtaɪər //UK // (əˈtaɪə) //

装束,穿着,装扮,穿着打扮

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    at·tired, at·tir·ing.

    • : to dress, array, or adorn, especially for special occasions, ceremonials, etc.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : clothes or apparel, especially rich or splendid garments.
    • : the horns of a deer.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The guidelines would require schools to accept name and pronoun changes, eliminate gender-specific attire from dress codes and uniforms and allow students and staff to use facilities that correspond with their gender identity.

  • We’ve abandoned business attire for comfortable lounge wear.

  • Hillstone’s restaurants are reluctant to enforce masks — but they forbid guests from wearing hats, tank tops, flip flops and team athletic attire.

  • Consumers have not only reduced their consumption of nonessential items like clothing Advertisement , but are buying more quality garments over cheap, disposable attire.

  • In March and April, demand for certain products like travel accessories and wedding attire all but evaporated as those activities became impossible to do under stay-at-home orders.

  • There are also multiple vectors of cool, each defined by distinctive attire.

  • By 1915, mourning attire had begun to draw more attention to the mourner than to the deceased, drawing critics to the practice.

  • From the refined attire at Lincoln Center to the avant-garde dress downtown, we spotted many of the big 2014 trends.

  • But in one area, they seem to have regressed: bathing attire is starting to look positively Victorian.

  • He had traded his convict uniform for civilian attire, though he still had on prison-issue footwear.

  • And he girded him about with a glorious girdle, and clothed him with a robe of glory, and crowned him with majestic attire.

  • When he bent his elbows the sleeves flew up his arms, and these wristers became the most conspicuous thing in his whole attire.

  • His attire, from the square-pointed collar down to the neat black brogues, was spotless.

  • There seems to be no sufficient reason for explaining it by 'necklace' or 'gorget,' as if it were a separable article of attire.

  • The town itself was still in holiday attire in honor of its royal guest of the preceding day.