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Baby wear
Answer for the clue "Baby wear ", 6 letters:
sacque
Alternative clues for the word sacque
Word definitions for sacque in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (''Variant of'' '''sack''') A short loose-fitting garment for women and children.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Sack \Sack\, n. [OE. sak, sek, AS. sacc, s[ae]cc, L. saccus, Gr. sa`kkos from Heb. sak; cf. F. sac, from the Latin. Cf. Sac , Satchel , Sack to plunder.] A bag for holding and carrying goods of any kind; a receptacle made of some kind of pliable material, ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a woman's full loose hiplength jacket [syn: sack ]
Usage examples of sacque.
Outside stood a tiny, wispy lady of late middle years, wearing a quilted sacque of plum-coloured satin which would have been the height of alamodality some thirty years ago.
Reaching for the dressing sacque that Estelle had laid out for her, she began to push her arms into the sleeves.
She discarded her dressing sacque before climbing to the surface of the high mattress and sliding under the sheet and coverlet.
With her hair trailing in wet, wheat gold strands down her back and her dressing sacque pulled around her, she paused to stare up at him.
She breathed deep of it, even as she wrapped her dressing sacque closer around her.
Deborah, also in a dressing sacque over her night-clothes and with her hair spilling down her back.
She wore her usual morning costume -- a breakfast sacque of black silk profusely trimmed with lace, and a black silk skirt.
She was trying vainly to think of someone to whom she might give a small sacque as a gift.
But the current, leaping over the pebbles, carried this sacque, which seemed possessed, as it went along, much more rapidly than he.
General Browne suddenly start, and assume an attitude of the utmost surprise, not unmixed with fear, as his eyes were suddenly caught and riveted by a portrait of an old lady in a sacque, the fashionable dress of the end of the seventeenth century.
General Browne suddenly start, and assume an attitude of the utmost, surprise, not unmixed with fear, as his eyes were caught and suddenly riveted by a portrait of an old lady in a sacque, the fashionable dress of the end of the seventeenth century.
She had but time to arrange her dressing sacque when her father walked in.
She had brought her bonnet and sacque down-stairs with her, and was transferring them from the hatrack to her person while she talked.
When fastened, it would have the look of a loose sacque gown over a braided corset, but in fact the stomacher was part of the bodice, kept snug around the body by laces beneath the loose back.
Instead of a domino, she wore a flowing sacque gown of pristine white silk.