Wiktionary
a. Wearing a bowler hat
Usage examples of "bowler-hatted".
Instead of scouring the road where the bowler-hatted man had appeared, I had to search all the perimeter streets, while trying to look like a restless pregnant woman and her doting husband out for a prolonged neighborhood stroll.
Four times around the perimeter, and twice down the portal street itself, and all I could find with that rotting scent were the two trails: the bowler-hatted man and Rose.
Not as ill-fitting as the bowler-hatted man’s clothes, but enough to make me take a second look.
Three, in fact—Rose’s, the bowler-hatted man’s and Hull’s—but we couldn’t find them.
Yes, it was the bowler-hatted zombie’s trail, but at least four others crisscrossed over it…and there couldn’t have been that many people across this grassy patch since dark.
I gestured for Clay to follow, continuing in the same direction the bowler-hatted zombie had gone.
This trail was stronger than the bowler-hatted zombie’s, but didn’t seem any more recent.
Rose had been there, and probably the bowler-hatted man was in the shadows with her.
As I’d guessed from Hull’s words in the forest, it had been the bowler-hatted zombie, following the recipe of a long-dead killer.
I looked up to see the bowler-hatted zombie staggering down the stairs, knife in hand.
The bowler-hatted man was polishing the metal work of the Rolls with a cloth.
Almost as soon as Bond had come to this conclusion, the black, bowler-hatted figure of Oddjob appeared at the back door of the house and made some sort of a noise at Gold-finger.
Naked female nineteen-year-old bags of bones danced with the bowler-hatted little men and stopped every now and then to inject themselves.
And by the time the bird had landed at Alice's feet, it had turned into a fully grown Crow-woman: an ancient, creased-up crone of a human woman, complete with a crow's beak-and-wing accessories (and a bowler-hatted accompaniment).
This primitive world of kill or be killed was a long way from Cannon Street and the bowler-hatted boys.