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 Some Fun with Antiquated Hat Terms - Part Three - 1800 - 1900 <br/>-2

I have overlooked some obscure and unusual words while looking back at the history of hats and headdress. THE PROFESSOR AND THE MADMAN (by Simon Winchester, HarperCollins 1998) about the making of the Oxford English Dictionary, I thought it might be be fun to explore the definitions and etymology of some of these ancient terms, most of which have all but disappointed from modern use. [I'll breakup this project into three or four parts, so stay tuned.]

So qualify for inclusion below, the word must show up with a squiggly red line at Microsoft Word 's spell check' tool. So here goes:
[Note: As I move into part three of this project, terms become less lost in antiquity. I have included a few words, albeit rarely used today that did show up "spell check."]

Poke Bonnet

Now hist.

1. A bonnet with a projecting brim, fashionable esp. In the 19th cent.
1801 C. DIBDIN Song Smith in Mirth & Metre (1807) 62, I & # 39; ll hammer out songs by the staves if you please, Short as new-fashion "d sight, or as as long as poke bonnets. MACDONOGH Hermit in London V. xcii. 35 Another street nuisance is your poke-bonnet ladies, who sometimes put out your eyes with these pent-house projections. 1837 E. BULWER-LYTTON Ernest Maltravers II. IV. Vi. 67 A few ladies of middle age..wear .. straw poke bonnets. 1858 RS SURTEES Ask Mamma ix, [A] 18 144 Eight or nine ladies, gentlemen, and children, in the poke-bonnets and high-collared coats of the year 1839. 1913 W. Kate Greenaway & # 39; Kate Greenaway & # 39; style, .. her poke bonnet, brave her the look of a quaint little woman. 1984 P. E. Pioneers! I. i. ALLEN Old Galleries of Cumbria (BNC) 18 Married women wore a cap, a blue linen apron .., neb shaped clogs with buckled shoes for better wear, a poke bonnet and cloak for outer wear.

2. spec. A bonnet of this kind traditionally worn by women members of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), the Salvation Army, etc. Here is a wearer of this kind of bonnet.
1848 JR BARTLETT Dict. Americanisms sv, Poke-bonnet, a long, straight bonnet, much worn by Quarkers and Methodists. 1862 H. MARRYAT One Year in Sweden II. Lvi. 264 We dined at a farmhouse .., the property of Anabaptists 1877 Sat. Rev. 12 May 577/2 At Croydon, Dorking, and other favorite haunts of Friends, the afternoon, a sect most numerous in Götland. 1899 St. Louis James & # 39; Gaz. 17 Aug. 11/2 Never reached by the Church, .. or any 1902 E. BANKS Autobiogr. Newspaper Girl 107 The poke bonnet and dark blue dress, which I thought I would not get until until I had had other spiritual organizations, except possibly the & 1945 Musical Q. 31 276 Amish women are easily identified by their poke bonnets, sha 2000 Sunday Herald (Glasgow) (Nexis) 14 May 36 A Pennsylvania Amish in a poke bonnet goes next, happy as a bug.

Gibus

f. Gibus the name of the first maker.]

An opera or crush hat. Also gibus-hat.
1848 THACKERAY Bk. Snobs xviii, With his gibus-hat and his little glazed pumps. A 1854 E. FORBES Lit. Papers viii. (1855) 214 No man in a gibus ever commanded public awe or private respect. 1888 Daily Tel. 28 Apr The collapsible crush hat or Gibus.

[Note from Belinsky: Today a Gibus is more commonly known as a "Collapsible Top Hat."]

Riding Casquette

[Fr .; fem. of casquet, dim. of casque CASQUE.]

A head dress resembling a casque.
1840 LS COSTELLO Summ. Amongst Bocages II. 206 His long tresses were bound by an eastern-looking casquette.

[a. F. casque, ad. Sp. casco in same sense: see CASK n.]

Formerly written CASK. A term applied very loosely to all types of military head-pieces, and now only historical, poetical, or foreign.
1580-1649 [see CASK n. 4]. 1791 COWPER Iliad III. 375 They look them in a brazen casque. 1842 TENNYSON Galahad 1 My good blade carves the casques of men. 1877 Daily News 24 Dec. 5/4 The mitre-like casques of the Pauloff Guard regiment.

Manier Bandeau

[Fr .: OF. bandel, dim. form from bande BAND n.2; cf. BANDORE2.]

a. narrow band or fillet worn by women to bind the hair, or as part of a head-dress. b. A bandage for the eyes.
1706 T. BETTERTON Amorous Widow I. 4 The fairest Hair, the beautiful & # 39; st curls do not make your Forehead, so well as a Bando did. C 1790 F. BURNEY Diary (1842) I. 98 (D.) That bandeau 1858 C. MATHEWS Autobiog. (1879) I, In a laced night-cap with (1879) I wish I had a woman worn by every woman at court. a 1847 MRS. SHERWOOD Lady of Manor III. xxi. 277 Just make up this bandeau for my hair. 1761 The Chancellor of the Exchequer, as Paul Louis said of fortune, sees under his bandeau. 1908 [see BARRETTE 2]1959 Sunday Times 5 Apr. 22/5 As small as it is possible to be and still be called a hat, a band eau and bow are caught in a cage of veiling.

c. A strip of velvet or other material generally made up in a circular form to be stitched inside the lower part of the crown of a hat that is too large for the head.
1908 Daily Chron. 29 Jan. 4/7 With the right sort of & # 39; bandeau & # 39; .. you need not wear a hatpin at all.

Sennit Straw

Naut.
[var. of SINNET.]

a. = SINNET. b. (See quot. 1858.)
1881 Checkered Career 92 These young gentlemen are to be seen. 1769 FALCONER Dict. Marine (1789), Sennit. 1858 SIMMONDS Dict. Trade, Sennit, .. plaited straw or palm leaves, .making sennet, the lattle amusement being on a par with picking oakum.
1882 NARES Seamanship (ed. 6) 79 A sennit eye is worked in. c1898 J. CHALMERS in Lovett Life (1902) 146 The long sennit hawser kept on deck had been passed ashore to natives on the reef.

[Note from Belinsky: Today, a Sennit Straw is more commonly known as a "Boater" or "Skimmer" or "Sailor Straw".]

Montero

Now hist.
[Cadogan[Cadogan

[Said to be from the name of the 1st Earl Cadogan (died 1726). See Littré, and N. & Q. 7th Ser. IV. 467, 492.]

A mode of knotting the hair behind the head.
c 1780 B & # 39; NESS D & # 39; OBERKIRCH Mem. (1852) II. ix, The duchess of Bourbon had introduced the court of Montbéliard .. [the fashion] of cadogans, hitherto worn only by gentlemen.

Postilion Hat

Now chiefly hist.
[Puggree[Puggree

[a. Hind. pag a turban.]

1. A light turban or head-covering worn by inmates of the Indian subcontinent.
1665 SIR T. HERBERT Trav. (1677) 140 Eastern People..such .. as wear Turbans, Mandils, Dustars, and Puggarees. 1696 J. OVINGTON Voy. Suratt 314 With a Puggarie, or Turbant upon their Heads. 1698 FRYER Acc E. India & P. ​​93 A Green Vest and Puckery (or Turbat). 1845 SIR W. NAPIER Conq. Scinde II. I. 224 The Mohamedan Belooch always obeys him who wears the Puggree. 1893 W. FORBES-MITCHELL 1930 Aberdeen Press & Jrnl. 22 Apr. 5/2 He has no British officers and no uniform except a distinguishing kind of pagri (head-dress). 1930 Punch 1 Oct. 392/2 Mr Thompson should not allow this bee to find a permanent home in his pagri. 1974 B. MATHER White Dacoit 18 Sowars straightened tunics and pagris.

2. A scarf of thin muslin or a silk veil wound round the crown of a sun-helmet or hat and falling down behind as a shade.
1859 DICKENS in All Year Round 30 July 332/1 A & # 39; Puggery & # 39; is a long slip of white muslin which is bound round the hat and formed into a fantastic bow, with tails behind. 1866 Cornh. Mag. Dec 1885 Times 20 Feb. 6/1 Officers and men were attired in red serge tunics, .. sun helmets and puggarees. 1901 B. SHAW Three Plays for Purit., Capt. Brassbound I. 215 He wears the sun helmet and pagri, the neutral-tinted spectacles, and the white canvas Spanish sand shoes.

3. attrib., As puggree-cloth.
1934 [see DRILL n.5]1978 & # 39; MM KAYE & # 39; Far Pavilions vi. 98 She slept sound..tied to him by a length of pagri (turban) cloth that preceded her from falling.

Hent pugg (a) reed a., Covered with or wearing a puggree.
1881 MRS. C. PRAED Policy & PI 13 A broad-brimmed puggareed hat. 1900 Daily News 1 Aug. 3/1 A graceful wave of his green, puggareed soft slouch hat.

Cabriolet

[a. F. cabriolet, deriv. of cabriole, so called from its elastic bounding motion.]

1. a light two-wheeled chaise drawn by one horse, having a large hood of wood or leather, and an ample apron to cover the lap and legs of the occupant. Contracted by 1830 to CAB, and later later applied to b. A motor car with fixed side and a folding top.

2. A bonnet or hat shaped like a cabriolet.
1937 Daily Mail 22 June 11 Cabriolet hats are in fashion again ... With a cabriolet you must have ribbon streamers falling over one shoulder.

Marcel Wave

[PsycheKnot[PsycheKnot

[aGr(inLpsch)breathftobreathetoblow(later)tocool;herncelife(identifiedwithorshowinginthebreath);theanimatingprincipleinmanandotherlivingbeingsthesourceofallvitalactivityrationalorirrationalthesoulorspiritindistinctionfromitsmaterialvehicletheorbody;sometimesconsideredascapableofpersistinginadisembodiedstateafterseparationfromthebodyatdeath[aGr(inLpsch)breathftobreathetoblow(later)tocool;herncelife(identifiedwithorindicatedbythebreath);theanimatingprincipleinmanandotherlivingbeingsthesourceofallvitalactivitiesrationalorirrationalthesoulorspiritindistinctionfromitsmaterialvehicletheorbody;sometimesconsideredascapableofpersistinginadisembodiedstateafterseparationfromthebodyatdeath

In Mythology, personified as in 1 c. By Plato and other philosophers extended to the anima mundi, conceived to animate the general system of the universe, as the soul animals the individual organism. By St. Paul (developing a current Jewish distinction between rua, , with spirit or breath, and nephesh ,, soul) used for the lower or merely natural life of man, shared with other animals, in contrast with the or spirit, conceived as a higher element due to divine influence supervening upon the original constitution of unregenerate human nature: see PSYCHIC a. 2, PSYCHICAL 2. (For this and other developments in pre-Christian Judaism, and the NT writings, see RH Charles, Hist. Of the Doctrine of a Future Life, 1899.

1. The soul, or spirit, as distinguished from the body; the mind.
1698 SIR T. BROWNE Hydriot. Iv. 61 Why the Psyche or soul of Tiresias is of the masculine gender. 1794 SULLIVAN View Nat. II. 279 The two essentials in the composition of all sublunary things were, by the ancient Greeks, termed psyche 1877 tr. Virchow in Tyndall Fragm. Sc. (1879) II. xv. 407 If I explain attraction and repulsion as exhibitions of mind, as psychical phenomena, I simply throw the Psyche out of the window, and the Psyche ceases to be a Psyche. 1879 LEWES Study Psychol. 73 The most accredited [ancient] 1898 New Princeton Rev. Mar. 272 ​​Psychology is the science of the psyche or soul. 1896 P. GARDNER Sculptured Tombs Hellas 24 The psyche, to Homer, is not in the most like the Christian Soul, but is a shadowy double of the man, wanting alike in force and wisdom. 1905 EJ DILLON in Contemp. Rev. Aug. 287 It is difficult to to realize the position and to the picture the psyche of Rozhdestvensky [the Russian admiral who fired on the North Sea fishing fleet].

b. The animating principle of the universe as a whole, the soul of the world or an anima mundi.
1678 H. MORE Song of Soul Notes 138/2 This is the entrance of Psyche into the body of the Vniverse, kindling and exciting the dead mist. 1678 CUDWORTH Intell. Syst. I. iv. § 21. 388 This is taken by Plotinus § 23. 406 But in other places __ ___ 0 ___ 0 frequent asserts, above the Self - moving Psyche an Immovable and Standing Nous or Intellect, which was properly the Demiurgus.

c. In later Greek Mythol., Personified as the beloved of Eros (Cupid or Love), and shown in work of art as having butterfly wings, or as a butterfly; Known in literature as the heroine of the story related in the Golden Ass like that Psyche - # 39 ;, as in Psyche - knot (of hair), Psyche - mold, Psyche task.
1876 ​​GEO. ELIOT Dan. Der. Lxi, In the Psyche - Mold of Mirah 's frame there rested a fervid quality of emotion sometimes rashly supposedly to require the bulk of a Cleopatra. 1888 AR DIEHL Two Thousand Words 170 Psyche 1895 SB KENNEDY in Outing (US) Oct. 8/2 Do you think this Psyche knot suits the special cut of my features? 1901 West May. Gaz. 28 May 2/4 After many Psyche Tasks Fate - encumbered now unraveled, Hoping there. 1904 Ibid. 30 Nov. 4/2, I am not quite sure I know what is & 1968 J. UPDIKE Couples v. 404 Her hair was pinned up in a psyche knot. # 39; a Psyche knot & # 39 ;, which was what the lady & # 39;

Fred Belinsky

http://www.VillageHatShop.com




 Some Fun with Antiquated Hat Terms - Part Three - 1800 - 1900 <br/>-2


 Some Fun with Antiquated Hat Terms - Part Three - 1800 - 1900 <br/>-2

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