furbelow
English
WOTD – 19 December 2011
Etymology
Corruption of falbala; first attested in the late 1600s or early 1700s. Not related to fur.
Pronunciation
Noun
furbelow (plural furbelows)
- A frill, flounce, or ruffle, as on clothing; a decorative piece of fabric, especially one gathered or pleated as into a ruffle, etc.
- 1839, Frances Trollope, chapter I, in The Widow Barnaby. [...] In Three Volumes, volume II, London: Richard Bentley, […], OCLC 465583499, pages 24–25:
- I do not think that from the blissful time when I was sixteen, up to my present solemn five-and-thirty, I could ever have been tempted to look a second time at any miss under the chaperonship of such a dame as that feather and furbelow lady.
- 1863, John George Wood, The Illustrated Natural History, page 745,
- All the other furbelows, and portions of this one[this Medusa] that lay below the expansion, floated as usual through the water, except that on some occasions an accessory power was obtained by pressing a portion of another furbelow to the side of the glass and making it adhere just like the portion that was exposed to the surface of the air.
- 1964, E. J. H. Corner, The Life of Plants, 2002, University of Chicago Press, page 76,
- Each plant has several oarweed fronds on the top of a flat stem, well adapted to swaying in one direction but rigid in the other; along the rigid edges, where the water flows and eddies, develop the wavy furbelows.
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- A small, showy ornamentation.
- 1954, Alexander Alderson, chapter 4, in The Subtle Minotaur:
- The band played ceaselessly. Even when the other instruments were resting the pianist kept up his monotonous vamping, with a dreary furbelow for embellishment here and there, to which some few of the dancers continued to shuffle round the floor.
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Translations
ruffle — see ruffle
decorative piece of fabric
small, showy ornamentation
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Verb
furbelow (third-person singular simple present furbelows, present participle furbelowing, simple past and past participle furbelowed)
Related terms
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