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crinoline

 - 3 dictionary results

crin⋅o⋅line

[krin-l-in]
–noun
1. a petticoat of haircloth or other stiff material, worn under a full skirt to keep it belled out.
2. a stiff, coarse cotton material for interlining.
3. a hoop skirt.
4. a reinforcement of iron straps for holding together brickwork, as of a furnace or chimney.

Origin:
1820–30; < F < It crinolino, equiv. to crino horse-hair (≪ L crīnis hair) + lino flax < L līnum; cf. linen
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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crin·o·line   (krĭn'ə-lĭn)   
n.  
  1. A coarse stiff fabric of cotton or horsehair used especially to line and stiffen hats and garments.

  2. A petticoat made of this fabric.

  3. A hoop skirt.


[French, from Italian crinolino : crino, horsehair (from Latin crīnis, hair; see sker-2 in Indo-European roots) + lino, flax (from Latin līnum; see lno- in Indo-European roots).]
crin'o·line, crin'o·lined (-lĭnd) adj.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Encyclopedia

crinoline

originally, a petticoat made of horsehair fabric, of the late 1840s, taking its name from the French word crin ("horsehair"). It was worn with whalebone stays and multiple other petticoats and flounces. In 1856, horsehair and whalebone were replaced by a light frame of metal spring hoops. The wide, bell-shaped skirt contrasted with tiny corseted waists. In the late 1850s and early 1860s, the cage crinoline that evolved became so popular that it was worn by ladies' maids and factory girls as well as by the rich. From the dome shape of the 1850s, the crinoline was altered to a pyramid in the 1860s, and about 1865 it became almost flat in front. Smaller "walking" skirts were devised, and by 1868 the crinolette was hooped only at the back and served as a bustle. The crinoline was generally out of fashion by 1878. See also farthingale; hoop skirt.

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Encyclopedia Britannica, 2008. Encyclopedia Britannica Online.
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