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Sweater named for a general
Answer for the clue "Sweater named for a general ", 8 letters:
cardigan
Alternative clues for the word cardigan
Word definitions for cardigan in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cardigan \Car"di*gan\, a slightly bow-legged variety of corgi having rounded ears and a long tail. Syn: Cardigan Welsh corgi.
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
__NOTOC__ A cardigan is a type of knitted garment that has an open front. Commonly cardigans have buttons: a garment that is tied is instead considered a robe. A more modern version of the garment has no buttons and hangs open by design. By contrast, a ...
Usage examples of cardigan.
Tommy, her hair bushier than ever, her cardigan suit rumpled, trying to hold her own between two large men.
Besides his connection with the Cambrian, it gives details of his many other activities, including his representation of Cardigan Boroughs in the House of Commons from 1874 to 1885, and on the merging of the boroughs into the county, at that date, for Cardiganshire till 1886, when he was defeated on becoming an opponent of Mr.
There was this one in a pink cardigan holding her twenty fags and looking away when she seen me coming.
My choice of clothing reflected my mental state-black pants and an elderly gray turtleneck, topped with my furriest black cardigan.
Given to hanging his hands in the pockets of that nonregulation cardigan, he looked out of place on the tight little bridge.
Maggie dug into the pocket of her cardigan and came out with a computer diskette.
If you go from Tremadoc to Criccaeth, you pass by the parochial church of Ynysynhanarn, situated in a boggy valley running from the mountains, which shoulder up to the Rivals, down to Cardigan Bay.
The two figures were Randy Dickinson, a six-foot-seven giant in riot gear, and Ed Blaine, five-eight in his slippers and cardigan.
She was wearing zip-up furry bootees, three cardigans, an overcoat, a new woolly scarf Genevieve had bought her, and her best hat.
Under the coat she was wearing layers of old clammy cardigans, the stitches sagging, and the same skimpy dress as she had worn days before.
With difficulty, holding her, seating her, he took the ragged clothes away from her, the cardigans and the thin dress, fetid and clinging to her bony body.
It was this sand now that came swirling down the slope, wrapped around chip paper and cigarette butts on a funnel of hot wind, and in the middle of trying to dodge it and not drop their buckets and spades and cardigans, they saw the boy.
He wanted to work at a single project instead of half a dozen, to pick a direction and stick with it, but so far writing had earned him nothing, and the spectre of hitting forty in a ratty cardigan and a damp flat surrounded by thousands of press clippings filled him with depression.
Finally, she slipped on a long white knitted cardigan, and a small navy blue cloche hat.
She sat in a plain admiral's chair behind a polished rose-wood table, wearing a hyacinth cardigan over a peach chambray button-through dress, watching interviews on a big wall-mounted flatscreen.