knickerbocker
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]See knickerbockers.
Noun
[edit]knickerbocker (uncountable)
- (archaic, used attributively as a modifier) Of or relating to knickerbockers.
- 1892, The Twentieth Century:
- ...with a rudimentary beard to set it off, a dirty shirt, a rifle, a coat over my arm, and half a grouse in my knickerbocker pocket.
- 1905, Daniel Leavens Cady, Stray Breaths of North East Song:
- His knickerbocker days are gone,
His last long stockings laid away:
My baby has his trousers on, —
My boy becomes a man to-day.
- A linsey-woolsey fabric with a rough knotted surface on the right side, formerly used for women's dresses.
Derived terms
[edit]French
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]knickerbocker m (plural knickerbockers)
- Alternative form of knickerbockers