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A fitted overcoat with a velvet collar
Answer for the clue "A fitted overcoat with a velvet collar ", 12 letters:
chesterfield
Alternative clues for the word chesterfield
Word definitions for chesterfield in dictionaries
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 259903 Housing Units (2000): 97707 Land area (2000): 425.753719 sq. miles (1102.697023 sq. km) Water area (2000): 11.234385 sq. miles (29.096922 sq. km) Total area (2000): 436.988104 sq. miles (1131.793945 sq. km) Located within: Virginia ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
chesterfield \chesterfield\ n. a davenport with upright armrests. a fitted overcoat with a velvet collar.
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ But even the most recalcitrant could embrace one of the chesterfields or comfy cardigans. ▪ He took a hesitant step towards the chesterfield . ▪ Hereford 1 chesterfield 0, but it should have been more. ▪ The pea coats and chesterfields ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Chesterfield is a market town and a borough of Derbyshire , United Kingdom. It lies north of Derby and south of Sheffield , on a confluence of the rivers Rother and Hipper . It has a population of 103,800 (2011), making it the largest town within the administrative ...
Usage examples of chesterfield.
Melancholy, I might see more vividly his all-too-earthly connections with Macclesfield and Chesterfield, and beyond them, looming in the mephitic Stench, Newcastle and Mr.
I happened to visit Dr. Warburton, who finding that I was acquainted with Johnson, desired me earnestly to carry his compliments to him, and to tell him that he honoured him for his manly behaviour in rejecting these condescensions of Lord Chesterfield, and for resenting the treatment he had received from him, with a proper spirit.
He then told Dr. Adams, that Lord Chesterfield had shewn him the letter.
Looking through the doorless arch into the living room, I saw a leopardskin coat folded across the back of the chesterfield.
Plan of my Dictionary came to be inscribed to Lord Chesterfield, was this: I had neglected to write it by the time appointed.
Lord Chesterfield, it will be ascribed to deep policy, when, in fact, it was only a casual excuse for laziness.
Lord Chesterfield, to whom Johnson had paid the high compliment of addressing to his Lordship the Plan of his Dictionary, had behaved to him in such a manner as to excite his contempt and indignation.
Lord Chesterfield should, for a moment, imagine that he could be the dupe of such an artifice.
Warburton, who finding that I was acquainted with Johnson, desired me earnestly to carry his compliments to him, and to tell him that he honoured him for his manly behaviour in rejecting these condescensions of Lord Chesterfield, and for resenting the treatment he had received from him, with a proper spirit.
That Lord Chesterfield must have been mortified by the lofty contempt, and polite, yet keen satire with which Johnson exhibited him to himself in this letter, it is impossible to doubt.
This air of indifference, which imposed upon the worthy Dodsley, was certainly nothing but a specimen of that dissimulation which Lord Chesterfield inculcated as one of the most essential lessons for the conduct of life.
Does not Lord Chesterfield give precepts for uniting wickedness and the graces?
One of the company mentioned Lord Chesterfield, as a man who had no friend.
Lord Chesterfield did, by writing so many long and anxious letters to him, almost all of them when he was Secretary of State, which certainly was a proof of great goodness of disposition, should endeavour to make his son a rascal.
This drew an appreciative smile from the Chesterfield, so I persevered.