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Crossword clues for sundress

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
sundress
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A clutch of sweet-scented jasmine twined in her hair on one side of her head uplifted and upgraded her sundress.
▪ A woman in a yellow sundress came toward him, then veered quickly off the sidewalk.
▪ As mom inhales, Tamika sleeps, her pink and white sundress absorbing the fluids of unknown grown-ups.
▪ On Saturday morning, she was lounging on the terrace in a red sundress when the doorbell rang.
▪ She leapt into the front seat in a skimpy white sundress, glad to escape the house.
▪ She walked upstairs and changed quickly, slipping on a light flowered sundress in bold colours and her flat sandals.
▪ She wore a low-cut cotton sundress, a bright green-and-yellow geometric print on a white background.
▪ Then she took a shower and changed into a cool sundress.
Wiktionary
sundress

n. A typically sleeveless dress made of light material, usually a minidress, intended for spring and summer wear.

Wikipedia
Sundress

A sundress is a dress intended to be worn in warm weather. Typically, it is an informal or casual dress in a lightweight fabric, most commonly cotton, and usually loose fitting. The dress is intended to be worn without a layering top. Lilly Pulitzer popularized the sundress in the 1960s.

Sundress (EP)

Sundress EP is an EP from the American rock musician Ben Kweller. It was released August 29, 2006.

Usage examples of "sundress".

Their pretty little sundresses are damp with sweat and rumpled from being slept in.

My sundresses hung from the bar, along with some very lightweight bathrobes and nightgowns.

Boots, polished as a new penny in her yellow sundress, clapped her hands like a girl.

Art and Linda drank ginger beer in the observation car, spiking it with rum from a flask that Linda carried in a garter that she wore for the express purpose of being able to reach naughtily up her little sundress and produce a bottle of body-temperature liquor in a nickel-plated vessel whose shiny sides were dulled by the soft oil of her thigh.

She hated the amount of clothing she had to wear for this - shoes, jeans, shirt - but fences couldn't be fixed in a sundress, especially not when every section seemed determined to support at least one raspberry bush.

She was wearing a short off-white, spaghetti strap sundress and beige, ankle-strap heels.

In an impulse which now seems completely foreign to me, I grabbed the spaghetti straps of her sundress in each of my hands, and as she leaned up and twisted away from me, crossed one, then the other, over her head.