neckkerchief
Appearance
See also: neck-kerchief and neck kerchief
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]neckkerchief (plural neckkerchiefs or neckkerchieves)
- Alternative form of neckerchief.
- 1796, Nicholas Salmon, Stemmata Latinitatis; or, An Etymological Latin Dictionary: […], volume II, London: […] for the Author, by W. and C. Spilsbury, page 601:
- ſtrophiārius a maker or ſeller of neckkerchiefs or garlands
- 1797, [Denis] Diderot, translated by [unknown], The Nun, volume I, London: […] G[eorge,] G[eorge] and J[ohn] Robinson, […], pages 38 and 82:
- […] in the mean time she had lifted a corner of my neckkerchief, and placed her hand upon my bare shoulder, with the extremities of her fingers upon my bosom. […] The Superior rose; she did not sit down to table along with us, but she walked round, laying her hand upon the head of one, gently turning it back and kissing her brow; lifting the neckkerchief of another, placing her hand upon her bosom, and leaning on the back of the chair; […]
- 1806, The Annual Register, or a View of the History, Politics, and Literature, for the Year 1806, London: […] for F[rancis,] C[harles] and J[ohn] Rivington, […]; [b]y Law and Gilbert, […], page 42, column 1:
- Very few of the inhabitants ever ſaw this eccentric character with either hat, coat, waiſtcoat, or neckkerchief on.
- 1986, Turkish Review Quarterly Digest, page 96:
- Inspired by the patterns of Turkish rugs and handprinted neckkerchieves, he utilized them in geometrically abstract ways within various arrangements.
- 2005, Myriam Chapman, Why She Married Him, New York, N.Y.: Other Press, →ISBN, page 179:
- It seems to Nina that neither Rouia nor Gasha has the proper revolutionary seriousness, despite their red neckkerchiefs.