I. noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a cotton shirt/dress/jacket etc
▪
Egyptian cotton sheets are very expensive here.
a dress code (= rules about what you must wear )
▪
Some of the more expensive clubs have a dress code.
a dress designer (= for clothes for women )
▪
Christian Lacroix was one of Paris's most flamboyant dress designers.
a fancy dress party British English , a costume party American English (= one where people wear unusual clothes, for example so they look like someone from a story )
▪
She went to the fancy dress party as Snow White.
a party dress
▪
The little girls were wearing white party dresses.
be dressed in … clothes
▪
The man was dressed in ordinary clothes.
casually dressed
▪
a casually dressed young man
cocktail dress
dress a wound (= clean it and cover it with cloth )
▪
The nurse dressed my wound.
dress circle
dress rehearsal
dress sense
dress shirt
dress uniform
dress/clothes sense (= an ability to choose clothes well )
▪
Her dress sense was faultless.
dressed warmly
▪
Make sure that the children are dressed warmly.
dressing gown
dressing room
dressing table
evening dress
evening wear/dress (= formal clothes that people wear to social events in the evening )
▪
a shop specializing in glamorous evening wear
fancy dress
▪
an invitation to a fancy-dress party
French dressing
full dress
▪
officers in full dress uniform
fully dressed
▪
She collapsed fully dressed on the bed.
morning dress
national dress
power dressing
salad dressing
wedding dress
window dressing
▪
All these glossy pamphlets are just window dressing – the fact is that the new mall will ruin the neighborhood.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
beautiful
▪
It was a beautiful dress , white seersucker dotted with small mauve flowers.
▪
She had the most beautiful dresses .
▪
The trouble was, she was fat, so the beautiful dress and the beautiful coat didn't really matter very much.
▪
Jane saw Gabby quietly standing in a corner in a beautiful gray wool dress Francois Brac had designed for her.
▪
Almost as beautiful as the dress you are wearing.
▪
They had bought a paper pattern, and followed the instructions carefully; it would be the most beautiful dress ever seen.
▪
Anne looked beautiful in a dress of white organdie with a wreath of orange blossom on her dark hair.
▪
The slaves grew it and the children spun it and people like Miss Harker were wearing beautiful dresses .
black
▪
I settled on one of my favourites-a simple black dress .
▪
She is wearing a black dress and pearls, and a stole is strewn on the front seat.
▪
Biddy, in her neat little black dress , was busy serving food.
▪
It was easier to keep up a black dress than a white one.
▪
She was a blonde in a black dress , wearing a tiny hat with a visor of veil.
▪
She was singing on a stage in back of the bar and was wearing a black dress .
▪
The women wore severe black dresses or full-length black kimono.
blue
▪
On one occasion they unearthed a blue taffeta ball dress with small bouquets of pink and cream brocade roses.
▪
Tipper Gore will wear a Jennifer George blue wool dress and jacket set topped by a sapphire alpaca coat for day.
▪
Mum wore a pretty blue dress and Dad was wearing his best suit.
▪
I had heard him telling an old woman at the house that her blue dress suited her wonderfully.
▪
She was wearing the blue and green dress and it suited her every bit as well Claudia had thought it would.
▪
Dark-haired and dark-skinned, a pale blue dress and ivory sweater.
▪
They closed protectively round Flora in their red, green and blue dresses .
▪
She had tinted blond hair, large glasses, a blue dress cinched at the waist by a wide glossy belt.
casual
▪
He scrapped segregated dining rooms and often walked around barefoot and in casual dress , eating bananas.
▪
Some have actually instituted casual dress on snowy days so that workers can dress comfortably and warmly when the weather turns sour.
▪
On reflection she believed it was something to do with the way she looked - her casual dress .
▪
Californians are casual in dress , even at the opera or in the finest restaurants.
▪
It turns out that casual dress had not erased that distinction.
dark
▪
The woman wore a dark heavy dress with three-quarter-length sleeves.
▪
She wore a dark green strapless dress with an enormous skirt.
▪
She chose a dark green fitted dress - not quite in mourning, but a sombre colour to match her mood.
▪
Her dark dress has a creamy collar and cuffs, daubed with salmon trim.
▪
She took a step into the room and noticed a dark red dress on the sofa.
▪
She sighed as she inspected her one good dark blue wool dress , its seat shiny with wear.
▪
She was wearing the dark green woollen dress that showed off her still remarkable contours.
▪
She wears a dark print dress with a black lace collar; her large hands rest on her lap.
full
▪
Archer was in full evening dress .
▪
The closet was full of dresses .
▪
The 2000-strong audience wore full evening dress .
▪
There is a partial recreation of a dramatic battle scene, with life-size models in armour and full battle dress .
▪
At ten o'clock Morton put on full evening dress , and took a cab to the Beresfords' mansion.
▪
Perhaps this was his idea of full dress for a ceremonial occasion.
▪
Against the walls sat row behind row of chiefs, in all the glory of full dress .
▪
Busacher arrived first, looking grand and archaic in full evening dress , white tie and tails.
green
▪
And what she saw was a handsome dark-haired young man who sat laughing with a girl in a bright green dress .
▪
She was wearing the blue and green dress and it suited her every bit as well Claudia had thought it would.
▪
She was wearing a green print dress and a canvas hat with a sun visor.
▪
He liked it then she wore her green dress , with the belt that had a brass buckle.
▪
She wore a dark green strapless dress with an enormous skirt.
▪
They closed protectively round Flora in their red, green and blue dresses .
▪
I saw her sitting there, in her green tartan dress .
little
▪
Biddy, in her neat little black dress , was busy serving food.
▪
Louise picked out a pretty little pink dress that nobody could possibly take exception to and so honour was satisfied.
▪
And no, a little black cocktail dress will not do.
▪
First, the little black dress: it's the only permissible way with black this winter.
▪
The child was awash in the boiling water; her drenched little dress clung to her.
▪
Just add a little black dress to show the necklace off to maximum effect.
▪
The little black designer dress had been an impulse buy earlier in the year, and she'd never worn it.
long
▪
This dress reminds me of my first long dress.
▪
Jill Franklin wore a long white cotton dress with small roses in its pattern.
▪
Lady Thomson, Midge and Chris were wearing long dresses .
▪
Then I saw her, standing in the orchard in her long white dress .
▪
Obediently, Martha studied the image of a glassy-eyed young white woman in a long white dress and tiara.
▪
In this light of evolutionary time, ecology can be seen as one long dress rehearsal.
▪
Money was made by long runs of dresses successfully sold.
▪
At every bus stop there were colourful clutches of women in long dresses with well-scrubbed children, bound for church.
modern
▪
Of course, the statue was in modern dress .
▪
Has to be modern dress obviously, and ideally an elderly character.
new
▪
Every evening I watched Eliza and Georgiana putting on their new dresses and going out to parties.
▪
Mom grew up during the Depression, always doing without a new dress .
▪
I've got to go now as it's time for me to get my new dresses fitted.
▪
You know when a woman has a life change and puts on a new dress ?
▪
I wished for a new dress as I washed and ironed my old yellow home-made mini for the hundredth time.
▪
She fell into another and tore her new red dress .
▪
Maybe I could have a new dress .
▪
She'd treated herself to the new dress , from the boutique recommended by Anneliese.
pink
▪
When found, she was wearing a pink floral dress , lilac tights, a white cardigan and black patent leather shoes.
▪
Something about the slave girl fascinated Heather as she took in the pink silk dress hugging the curves of her body.
▪
I wore a sweet pink dress with dark pink roses patterning it.
▪
Would Papa consent, in a few years' time, to his marrying the quiet young woman in the pink dress ?
▪
The baby, obviously a girl in a pale pink broderie anglaise dress , was beautiful.
▪
She wore a pale pink dress that swirled around slender legs and her hair was caught back with a matching headband.
▪
Louise picked out a pretty little pink dress that nobody could possibly take exception to and so honour was satisfied.
▪
Benny was large and square, but she wouldn't look like that in the pink velvet dress .
pretty
▪
That's a very pretty dress you're wearing.
▪
She told him to bring her a pretty dress and her best handkerchief.
▪
She took particular care with her preparations and chose a light, pretty dress and sensational earrings.
▪
Mum wore a pretty blue dress and Dad was wearing his best suit.
▪
She thought this was the prettiest dancing dress she had ever seen.
▪
Drowsily, achingly she allowed him to explore her flesh where it was revealed above the neckline of her pretty dress .
▪
But I've walked past so many pretty dresses and little socks with lacy tops, I'd almost given up.
▪
Louise picked out a pretty little pink dress that nobody could possibly take exception to and so honour was satisfied.
red
▪
She was wearing a tight red dress which showed off her shapely legs.
▪
She slips on a bright red party dress and she becomes a fun teenager.
▪
McDougal arrives in a faded red dress and good spirits.
▪
Her red dress had not been made to walk in and had seen better days.
▪
Finally, pleased with the results, I put on my petticoats, my camisole, and then my red plaid dress .
▪
A woman was moving on stage, a woman wearing a red dress .
▪
She wore sunglasses, and that thin red gingham dress he liked on her.
short
▪
She was wearing a short lilac dress and a pale cashmere jacket, beneath which the jet pendant glimmered in inky symbolism.
▪
Women were wearing short dresses ending at their knees and hats that looked like overturned pots.
▪
They keep their legs slightly apart so as not ro bruise the boils under their too short dresses and thin cotton underpants.
▪
The arms say the light of day in a short sleeved dress and they are like the arms of a prize fighter.
▪
Alter baptism, she cuts her hair short and dresses like a man.
▪
Anna wore a short cream dress , from which her long legs emerged, seemingly, for ever.
▪
She wore a short black dress and glass earrings.
white
▪
In the garden in her white dress , she knew she had done the wrong thing.
▪
I would have helped you bathe and dress , I would have made you a white dress, silk or linen.
▪
The white dress lay on the bed.
▪
The white dresses , the long white gloves, the limos, the whole nine yards.
▪
Nice? she wanted to scream, wanted to grab those scrawny arms in that cheap white dress and demand, Nice?
▪
Obediently, Martha studied the image of a glassy-eyed young white woman in a long white dress and tiara.
▪
The heat made her white dress stick to her.
yellow
▪
She was wearing her favourite yellow linen dress and pretty cream high-heeled shoes with Jim's pearls gleaming against her elegant neck.
▪
The photo filled the cover, the photo of Cory Aquino in her yellow dress , Woman of the Year.
▪
Her yellow dress , her hands searching her black hair.
▪
He saw the figure in the yellow dress become smaller and smaller.
▪
Nan wore the smart navy coat she had worn yesterday, but this time over a pale yellow wool dress .
▪
Liza took a yellow cotton button-through dress out of her wardrobe.
▪
She could not get the image of a yellow piqué dress crumpled on a white bed out of her mind.
■ NOUN
cocktail
▪
Northern Whites Cream chenille sweaters, warm oatmeal jackets and ivory cocktail dresses guide the way into winter.
▪
And no, a little black cocktail dress will not do.
▪
Ruth shifted uncomfortably in her azure crêpe de Chine cocktail dress .
▪
Smart casual wear is quite in order for dinner time, but bring one cocktail dress for the Captain's cocktail party.
▪
I have seen her before, in a cocktail dress at some one's party, or at an exhibition perhaps.
code
▪
It's a cool drinking venue, with a noir dress code observed by the arty crowd and staff.
▪
Usually, there is something behind a dress code , some reasoning.
▪
Instead of simplifying life, relaxed business dress codes have become an expensive and troublesome burden.
▪
I have discovered a dress code among Labour party members.
▪
I knew the language, the dress codes , what the leisure weekend activites were.
▪
The dress code in the East Links clubhouse required only that entrants not wear spikes.
▪
Most public schools already have dress codes .
cotton
▪
Ruth wore the pale lavender cotton dress which Mrs Carson had given her.
▪
I settle on a simple cotton dress , black, and a pair of dangling earrings.
▪
Jill Franklin wore a long white cotton dress with small roses in its pattern.
▪
She was wearing a pale green cotton dress .
▪
Maria was wearing a simple cotton dress and sandals.
▪
With this criterion in mind she'd picked a neat black cotton dress , short-sleeved and V-necked.
▪
The other girls are carrying purses and wearing seersucker and madras cotton blouses or printed cotton dresses and penny loafers.
designer
▪
Ossie Clark, Sixties dress designer , 51.
▪
She wants to be a dress designer .
▪
I also had a meeting with the dress designer for the Palladium show.
▪
Beginning at 11am, the discussion will be opened by well-known dress designer Joanne Ferguson.
evening
▪
Archer was in full evening dress .
▪
A man and woman in evening dress alighted from it.
▪
The 2000-strong audience wore full evening dress .
▪
Princess Margaret wore a pretty blue silk evening dress , and sat in the front row of the circle.
▪
The first three rows of the stalls were filled with people in evening dress .
▪
It is absolutely vital to the sales of a popular car, a hi-fi radio, a camera or an evening dress .
▪
The Oistrakhs bow and scrape in evening dress , on Emi-tape.
▪
Busacher arrived first, looking grand and archaic in full evening dress , white tie and tails.
party
▪
She slips on a bright red party dress and she becomes a fun teenager.
▪
The sunlight glimmered off these blades and when the sea breeze swept through they rippled like sequins on a party dress .
▪
She does a little pose, having worn a real party dress .
▪
At the hospital George Cummings swung aside the ambulance door and pulled out a girl still in her white party dress .
▪
Maire Carroll arrived wearing a proper party dress .
▪
I can remember a party dress that I loved - a white one with bright, tiny flowers on and lace trimming.
shirt
▪
Zach put it on and when the jacket was done up it looked as if he was wearing a proper dress shirt .
▪
He wears a suit and a dress shirt without a tie, along with a straw hat that is out of style.
▪
For one thing, I forgot to turn off the iron and nearly burnt the Professor's dress shirt I was ironing.
▪
He held up his arms to show the unfastened cuffs of his dress shirt sticking out from the sleeves of his jacket.
▪
He wore a short-sleeved dress shirt with the collar open and his necktie at half-mast.
▪
He threw my dress shirt over it so all was pale blue.
▪
Every day Mones came to class in a short-sleeved dress shirt and shiny black tie-up shoes.
shop
▪
Rituals and Cults Sessions at the make-up table, in dress shops , hairdressers and beauty parlours.
▪
She was also determined to spend as much time in dress shops as she possibly could!
▪
Part of the ground floor had become a dress shop .
▪
She worked as an assistant in a dress shop and it was important that she looked smart.
silk
▪
Lyddy interrupted her reverie with the cream silk dress laid across her arms like an offering.
▪
Something about the slave girl fascinated Heather as she took in the pink silk dress hugging the curves of her body.
▪
Lucy wore a petrol blue watered silk dress with matching velvet jacket and had hyacinth pips in her hair.
▪
She was swathed in a red silk dress that fitted where it touched.
▪
She walked into his rooms without knocking, wearing an emerald-green silk dress , no hat, and the Conway pearls.
summer
▪
She was ready for Stephen promptly at eleven, wearing a summer dress of wild silk in a rich pink-peach colour.
▪
The countryside had put on its summer dress , so many shades of green and everything fresh and clean.
▪
Instead, I kissed her tenderly on the arm, just below the sleeve of her summer dress .
▪
Men in shirtsleeves and women in summer dresses were strolling around the airport and ice-cream vendors were doing a brisk trade.
▪
Her stomach rumbled with hunger and she was chilled in her light summer dress .
▪
She felt the full skirt of her Summer dress being swept up to bare her silken thighs and round firm bottom.
▪
Her pretty summer dress was soiled where she had knelt on the pavement.
▪
One wore a tattered summer dress in pink spotted cotton with double flounces, the other a pinafore over a checked blouse.
uniform
▪
In spite of the heat, parties in full dress uniform were sent to scour the countryside.
▪
My father attended in his dress uniform .
wedding
▪
Brides-to-be can also catch a glimpse of a specially commissioned wedding dress .
▪
That night I was again subjected to the ordeal by wedding dress .
▪
Inside, buried in acid-free tissue paper, was her wedding dress .
▪
So will the new wedding dress .
▪
He also designed Princess Margaret's wedding dress in 1960.
▪
I've got this smart suit on and Marie's wearing this white wedding dress with all these frilly bits.
■ VERB
buy
▪
Why not buy a dress with this year's fashion colour!
▪
Everybody seemed to have bought a new dress for the occasion, and she had hardly finished paying for her suit.
▪
And for each of the 15 girls buying dresses , there is an escort in need of a tuxedo.
▪
They reassured her that she looked beautiful, and she knew they had bought the dress for her.
put
▪
Every evening I watched Eliza and Georgiana putting on their new dresses and going out to parties.
▪
When Sonya brought in the food, I noticed she had put on a new dress .
▪
You put her dress and the necklace in the boiler room.
▪
But he begged sick and I put on my dress and we walked into the corn holding hands.
▪
All the same, most of them were splendid and she was glad she had put on a dress today.
▪
You know when a woman has a life change and puts on a new dress ?
▪
Not only words, but ideas had to be put into other dress .
▪
She was sorry she had to put on the dress she had been wearing yesterday.
wear
▪
Zach put it on and when the jacket was done up it looked as if he was wearing a proper dress shirt.
▪
I was wearing my black dress and moved among the trees like a living shadow.
▪
She does a little pose, having worn a real party dress .
▪
She was singing on a stage in back of the bar and was wearing a black dress .
▪
Some of them wore dresses with bulky trainers showing at the bottom.
▪
She is wearing a black dress and pearls, and a stole is strewn on the front seat.
▪
She seemed to be wearing Anna's evening dress , long and black and trailing on the floor, winking with spangles.
▪
She was wearing a green print dress and a canvas hat with a sun visor.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
best dress/shoes/clothes etc
▪
Everyone was in black because their best clothes were for funerals, and everyone danced.
▪
I washed them, then dressed them in their best clothes, but never new ones.
▪
She had her best shoes on, and a new hat.
▪
She had the best dress sense of any girl in Benedict's and a passion for altering the colour of her hair.
▪
The best car, the wittiest put-down, and the best dress.
▪
The first best clothes were only for Sunday and when visitors came.
▪
The princess arrayed herself in her best clothes and jewels.
▪
They would never let you in alone, even though you are wearing your best clothes.
dressed (up) to the nines
▪
Now, remember the elegant woman, always dressed to the nines, with the infectious laugh.
dressed to kill
▪
In her black velvet cocktail dress, Elaine Russell was dressed to kill.
▪
Erica, who had been dressed to kill when he got to the flat, had agreed.
▪
He is dressed to kill with no place to go.
full-length skirt/dress/coat etc
get dressed
▪
I got dressed quickly and ran outside.
▪
Rob got dressed in a hurry.
▪
Sandra's in the bedroom getting dressed .
▪
After washing, we wandered around outside the tents drying in the sun and getting dressed .
▪
I just wanted to get dressed in peace.
▪
It took me fifteen minutes to get dressed .
▪
Liz dragged her out of bed and stood over her while she got dressed .
▪
Ruta, get dressed , get dressed quick.
▪
The nappy changes, the meal times, the endless trips round supermarkets, school times, getting dressed and so on?
it bag/dress/shoes etc
midi skirt/dress/coat
strapless dress/gown/bra
▪
She wore a dark green strapless dress with an enormous skirt.
▪
Susanna wore a black silk strapless dress.
suitably dressed/prepared/equipped etc
▪
But one must be suitably dressed for a country visit and I had absolutely nothing fit to wear.
▪
They, too, regardless of the loss of their leader, were intent on being suitably dressed for Bank Holiday.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
Do you like my new dress ?
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
And for each of the 15 girls buying dresses, there is an escort in need of a tuxedo.
▪
Anita's dress , £180, Karen Boyd.
▪
Arrested for attending Quaker and Seeker meetings, he was excused by a judge who noted his fine dress .
▪
Her dress was sticking uncomfortably to her back and her palms were wet.
▪
Minna, as if she were proving some point, wore an old dress and had not bothered-to comb her hair properly.
▪
The first time I meet her, I wear an unflattering dress .
▪
Your spokesman will also need some advice on dress for television.
II. verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
all
▪
They were all dressed in black.
▪
He is dressed all in black, except for a white shirt.
▪
It was just too galling, seeing him all dressed up for some one else.
▪
Larger than he used to be, if not larger than life, he is dressed all in black.
▪
There are 11 people in the band, all dressed to project their own characters.
▪
Ralph asked their father as he did every time the family came out all dressed up.
▪
Another dead kid, and all dressed up in Mosse's old clothes.
▪
I have recoiled from a picture of myself in our family photograph album, all dressed up in this costume.
casually
▪
On one famous occasion Diana, barefoot and casually dressed in jeans, buttered toast for an astonished footman.
▪
She and her polite staff dress casually .
▪
I was more casually dressed in corduroys and a black leather jacket.
▪
Among them: Free everyone to dress casually because there are no credible studies linking job performance with attire.
▪
He was casually dressed and had a rumpled look.
▪
BankAmerica employees like dressing casually so much they are willing to pay for the privilege.
▪
He dressed casually in a red golfing sweater, pale blue trousers, and deceptively ordinary-looking hand-made shoes.
▪
Marsha sits at her office desk, casually dressed , as usual.
fully
▪
He was lying face downwards in the shadow of the short diving-board, fully dressed in a blazer and white linen trousers.
▪
He was still fully dressed , except for the jacket and he, literally, hugged his side of the bed.
▪
She took one step forward and toppled Mitch fully dressed in to the swimming-pool without a moment's hesitation.
▪
She was fully dressed , wearing a hat and coat.
▪
When the bell is deployed, the divers descend fully dressed .
▪
After a while I went back to my room and lay down, fully dressed , waiting.
▪
As I suspected, Richard was fully dressed .
smartly
▪
Elegantly restored ballroom that plays house, garage and disco to a smartly dressed , trendy crowd-no jeans or trainers.
▪
Each has a young, smartly dressed teacher in front of a blackboard.
▪
He was smartly dressed in a white shirt and dark trousers.
▪
The same guidelines apply as at more conventional interviews, including presenting yourself confidently and being smartly dressed .
▪
He was particularly smartly dressed in black trousers and waistcoat, white shirt and red bow-tie.
▪
Contrary to the popular stereotype, they take care to dress smartly , according to current youth fashions.
▪
In spite of the heat he was very smartly dressed in a dark three-piece suit.
▪
He was smartly dressed in a two piece suit.
up
▪
We thought anyone who dresses up in dresses we want to go and see.
▪
You really ought to dress up more, Cal.
▪
We don't dress up and go out dancing.
▪
I love to get dressed up .
▪
You don't have to get dressed up , I just like to.
▪
It was just too galling, seeing him all dressed up for some one else.
▪
Mum had dressed up , and was looking all sweet in a blue dress with a bow at the front.
▪
Dinah Asshe could not remember a time when she had not enjoyed dressing up .
well
▪
He passed the Post Office, where a young black man, tall and well dressed , stood talking quietly to himself.
▪
Sitting on the next bench were two young women, dazzling creatures, well dressed and well fed.
▪
This is partly because - as he realizes with a shock - he is remarkably well dressed .
▪
The mole: Handsome and well dressed as moles go; he wanted to marry Thumbelina.
▪
He could afford to dress well for the pay was good.
▪
Nora tried her best to get round the wartime restrictions so that Constance could be well dressed .
▪
Beyond that, it promises to provide a weekly primer on dopey and unctuous behavior among upscale hillbillies who dress well .
■ NOUN
body
▪
They also may apply cosmetics to provide a natural appearance, and then dress the body and place it in a casket.
▪
I myself questioned the royal physician who dressed the body for burial at Jedburgh Abbey, Duncan MacAirth.
▪
There was a line there of shabbily dressed shuffling bodies .
▪
What I felt I was doing, as I dressed my shivering body in layer upon layer, was protecting myself.
▪
Her wound was dressed , her body and clothes were clean, and her hair was neat.
clothes
▪
There were people dressed in gay bright clothes walking on the promenade.
▪
Teen-age girls cut their hair and dressed in baggy clothes to be less attractive to the mysterious killer.
▪
To blackmail a man because he likes dressing in women's clothes .
▪
Normal stores have security people dressed in such plain clothes you wonder how they can afford to do any shopping.
▪
When they wake they dress in the loosest clothes , skip breakfast and head for the tennis courts.
▪
Daniel removes Mordecai to rooms in Chelsea, dresses him in new clothes , and brings Mirah to her brother.
▪
They were both pale-faced, hot and dishevelled, and dressed in loose-fitting crumpled clothes .
▪
He is dressed in differ-ent clothes .
costume
▪
Everyone was dressed in Music Hall costume .
▪
Some have made pilgrimages to re-enact ancient rituals in caves, others have dressed in costumes and objects evoking traditional Goddess images.
▪
The dinner will be held in a marquee in Friary Gardens, Richmond, with guests dressed in Victorian costume .
▪
Consequently, Julius Caesar was dressed in Elizabethan costume because no one thought that he ought to be dressed any differently.
▪
I have recoiled from a picture of myself in our family photograph album, all dressed up in this costume .
▪
Staff dressed in period costume , and a photographic display recording the Branch's history was unveiled in the banking hall.
▪
Charles made himself up for the new role, and dressed in the new costume .
dinner
▪
He was dressed for dinner and she knew without doubt that they were not going to be invited to join him.
▪
Corinne and Joe dressed formally for dinner each evening, met in the small study for cocktails, and dined by themselves.
▪
He would stride on to the concert platform, a tall, self-assured man impeccably dressed in a dinner jacket.
▪
Pauline Davis taught the young man how to dress for a formal dinner and how to observe the required etiquette.
▪
Jim and William Reid don't dress for dinner .
▪
While we were dressing for dinner , Jasper spent a long time trying to teach me how to tie it.
▪
One day, it was a Saturday between matinee and evening, I got dressed to go for dinner .
▪
Tea was served at four-thirty, and after tea everybody would rush upstairs to dress for dinner .
evening
▪
The band, dressed in evening wear and sitting on a raised dais, were at the far end of the hall.
▪
You are dressed in formal evening clothes, and it is obvious you are competing in a ballroom dance contest.
hair
▪
In youth she would have dressed her hair to cover them.
▪
In the dark she put on a fresh silk dress and brushed her hair .
▪
She dried herself, dressed , brushed her hair and re-applied her make-up, then inspected her reflection in the mirror.
jeans
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On one famous occasion Diana, barefoot and casually dressed in jeans , buttered toast for an astonished footman.
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Alvin dressed in blue jeans , shirts and boots and looked like the renegade that he felt he was.
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Like her, he was dressed in jeans , and a denim shirt.
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She turned off the water and stepped out on to the rug, dried herself, and dressed in jeans and a shirt.
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Jimmy, dressed in jeans and a black leather jacket, had arrived on his motorbike.
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Then she dressed quickly in jeans and a long-sleeved shirt and pulled on her thick Aran cardigan.
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Young and slim, dressed in blue jeans and denim jacket, the man worked the Dancing Fly.
salad
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Use nonfat or low-fat salad dressing as a dip.
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Diet drinks and water are also unlimited ò Unlimited salad with fat-free dressing may be served with lunch and dinner.
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A lot of it, and some salad dressing .
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Add the salad dressing and any juice from the orange and mix well.
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Need a spicy low-fat salad dressing ?
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She was in the middle of making a salad dressing when some one rang her doorbell.
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They suggest serving it for a light supper with couscous and a mesclun salad dressed with raspberry vinaigrette.&038;.
shirt
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He was smartly dressed in a white shirt and dark trousers.
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Gilfoyle sat in the dock dressed in a white shirt , dark blue tie, and grey cardigan.
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They washed at a pump behind the church, and each child was dressed in a clean shirt .
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He was dressed in a flannel shirt that was covered in sawdust.
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Jen came out of the bathroom, dressed in a shirt this time, and crawled into bed alongside me.
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He was fully dressed , his shirt creased enough to imply he had not been to bed at all.
suit
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He was dressed in a suit that looked as if it needed pressing.
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Some are dressed in business suits .
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The youths, aged about 15, dressed in brightly shell suits were riding mountain bikes.
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By now the cross-country vehicle had disgorged its complement of heavyweight occupants, also dressed in identical blue suits .
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As told to Cathy Troupp Peter was 33, six feet tall, and dressed in a well-worn suit and tie.
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He is dressed in an immaculate suit , but he is wearing bedroom slippers.
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There was a lovely picture of him on telly last night peering woefully over the fence dressed in snazzy suit .
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Although they were dressed formally in dark suits , both men were wearing heavy rubber boots in deference to winter.
uniform
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She dressed in an unvarying uniform of black ski pants and pink mohair pullover which became grubbier as the weeks passed.
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Row upon row they seemed to march, reminding Lucy of soldiers dressed in Prussian green uniforms .
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He was dressed in that uniform with its fancy red flashes when he came to Claudia's aid.
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The huts would look like they used to and inside there'd even be staff dressed in period uniform .
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Harvey was dressed in a khaki uniform with colonel's insignia on the collar.
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I woke before six and dressed in casual uniform and went to my office to get things ready for the day.
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There were others seated away from the table whose function was not clear to Holman, but three were dressed in military uniforms .
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She may be dressed in a different uniform , and therefore must explain her role to the patient.
window
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I will never forget, the shop windows were dressed beautifully with mauve velvet.
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The Raiders passing game was mere window dressing .
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It is, by itself, little more than window dressing on the part of the Government.
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Viewed in this light, the conference was mere window-dressing .
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Twelve Zekes were used as window dressing for the Akagi scenes.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
best dress/shoes/clothes etc
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Everyone was in black because their best clothes were for funerals, and everyone danced.
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I washed them, then dressed them in their best clothes, but never new ones.
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She had her best shoes on, and a new hat.
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She had the best dress sense of any girl in Benedict's and a passion for altering the colour of her hair.
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The best car, the wittiest put-down, and the best dress.
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The first best clothes were only for Sunday and when visitors came.
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The princess arrayed herself in her best clothes and jewels.
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They would never let you in alone, even though you are wearing your best clothes.
dress the part
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He would dress the part , even though he wore a cloak or hood.
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I had to admit he dressed the part .
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They dress the part and are convinced there's a market for them.
dressed (up) to the nines
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Now, remember the elegant woman, always dressed to the nines, with the infectious laugh.
dressed to kill
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In her black velvet cocktail dress, Elaine Russell was dressed to kill.
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Erica, who had been dressed to kill when he got to the flat, had agreed.
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He is dressed to kill with no place to go.
full-length skirt/dress/coat etc
get dressed
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I got dressed quickly and ran outside.
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Rob got dressed in a hurry.
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Sandra's in the bedroom getting dressed .
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After washing, we wandered around outside the tents drying in the sun and getting dressed .
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I just wanted to get dressed in peace.
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It took me fifteen minutes to get dressed .
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Liz dragged her out of bed and stood over her while she got dressed .
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Ruta, get dressed , get dressed quick.
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The nappy changes, the meal times, the endless trips round supermarkets, school times, getting dressed and so on?
it bag/dress/shoes etc
midi skirt/dress/coat
mutton dressed as lamb
strapless dress/gown/bra
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She wore a dark green strapless dress with an enormous skirt.
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Susanna wore a black silk strapless dress.
suitably dressed/prepared/equipped etc
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But one must be suitably dressed for a country visit and I had absolutely nothing fit to wear.
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They, too, regardless of the loss of their leader, were intent on being suitably dressed for Bank Holiday.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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Dress the salad with lemon, olive oil, and a little black pepper.
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Dress warmly - it's cold out.
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Ask Mom if she needs help dressing the turkey.
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Can you dress the kids while I make breakfast?
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Clean the area thoroughly before dressing the wound.
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How do most of the people dress at your office?
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It's a costume party, so she's dressing as a clown.
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Patty's just learning to dress herself.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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Check that those who can dress themselves are coping.
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He dresses and acts more like a 36-year-old electrical engineer.
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I didn't dress it up; no wonder she took it as life letting her down once more.