barege
Appearance
See also: barège
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]barege (countable and uncountable, plural bareges)
- Alternative spelling of barège
- 1908, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, The Shoulders of Atlas[1]:
- Rose took out an old barege of an ashes-of-roses color.
- 1900, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, Pembroke[2]:
- She moved, a stately high-hipped figure, her severe face almost concealed in a scooping green barege hood, to the centre of the floor, and stood there with a pose that might have answered for a statue of Judgment.
- 1871, Eleanor Frances Poynter, My Little Lady[3]:
- "Because her father--ah! bon jour, Madame--excuse me, Monsieur, but I go to pay my respects to Madame la Comtesse!" cried the Belgian, as an elderly red-faced lady, with fuzzy sandy hair, wearing a dingy, many-flounced lilac barege gown, came towards them along the gravel path.
- 1852, Mary H. Eastman, Aunt Phillis's Cabin[4]:
- She has on her blue barege dress, which implies her unvarying constancy.