Crossword clues for poncho
poncho
- Sleeveless top
- Pedro's cloak
- Waterproof garment
- Rain garment
- Bad-weather gear
- Waterproof cloak
- Type of raincoat
- The Man With No Name's garment
- Something to save for a rainy day
- Simple raincoat
- Simple rain gear
- Rain garb
- Over-the-head cloak
- Mexican cloak
- Loose, sleeveless raincoat
- Lightweight rainwear
- Blanket-like cloak
- Blanket with a hole in it?
- Blanket with a hole in it, basically
- Blanket with a big hole in it?
- Armless garment
- Sombrero accompanier
- Blanket wrap
- Wet-weather gear
- Pullover raincoat
- Something to put on before a shower
- A blanket-like cloak with a hole in the center for the head
- Llano dweller's garment
- Rain gear
- Raincoat
- Rain cloak
- Blanketlike raincoat
- Mexican cape
- Cloak with a hole in the centre for the head
- Woolly garment on child in river
- South American garment
- South American cloak with slit for the head
- South American cape
- S American garment
- Wet weather wear
- Blanketlike cloak with a hole in the center
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Poncho \Pon"cho\, n.; pl. Ponchos. [Sp.]
A kind of cloak worn by the Spanish Americans, having the form of a blanket, with a slit in the middle for the head to pass through. A kind of poncho made of rubber or painted cloth is used by the mounted troops in the United States service.
A trade name for camlets, or stout worsteds.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
type of blanket-like South American cloak, 1717, from American Spanish poncho, from Araucanian (Chile) pontho "woolen fabric," perhaps influenced by Spanish poncho (adj.), variant of pocho "discolored, faded."
Wiktionary
n. 1 A simple garment, made from a rectangle of cloth, with a slit in the middle for the head. 2 A similar waterproof garment, with a hood.
WordNet
n. a blanket-like cloak with a hole in the center for the head
Wikipedia
The Patrons of Northwest Civic, Cultural and Charitable Organizations (PONCHO) is a non-profit corporation in Seattle, Washington, whose annual fund-raising auction has long played a significant role in funding the arts in Seattle. However, over the years, the gala auction slowly ceased to be profitable and will not occur after 2008, being replaced by smaller art and wine auctions. Janet True, president of the PONCHO board, has indicated that the gala auction will probably be replaced by something parallel to New York City's Tony Awards.
The group was founded in 1963 to hold an auction to retire the US$35,000 debt accumulated by the Seattle Symphony's critically successful performance of Verdi's Aida at the 1962 Seattle World's Fair, the Century 21 Exposition. They exceeded their goal, raising enough additional money to give $50,000 to the Symphony to help establish the Seattle Opera, as well as $15,000 to the Council on Aging and $1,000 to the Seattle Chorale. In the subsequent 45 years, PONCHO has raised over $33 million for more than 200 Seattle-area arts organizations. Significant beneficiaries other than the Symphony and Opera have included the Pacific Northwest Ballet, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle Repertory Theatre, and ACT.
Brendan Kiley of Seattle alternative weekly The Stranger, writing on the occasion of PONCHO executive director Gordon Hamilton's forced departure in July 2008, sees PONCHO as gradually shifting from being a "deep donor" to large arts institutions into a "broad donor" whose beneficiaries have come to include smaller groups.
Usage examples of "poncho".
Francisco shook his head, and Angelo reached into his poncho for an unmarked glass bottle, no doubt containing chicha, the local cure for sobriety and a functioning liver.
When I took the parcel out of the pocket of my poncho I thought it felt deuced heavy, and there, sure enough, was one of those shilling flasks of brandy they sell for chaps to go on the road with.
He remembered screaming in anger as German machine guns turned the Rapido River to white froth, the way his arms ached as he drove the sinking rubber raft across to the north bank where the brush was already full of the black helmets and cammo ponchos of SS Division Das Reich, the shells called by the spotters at Monte Cassino splashing down everywhere, half his squad dead or wounded, bodies sprawled on the bottom of his boat in a mixture of river spray and their own blood.
His tongue sought the taste of her, his hands lightly skimmed the peaks and valleys beneath her deerskin poncho and were gone before she could mouth the words to protest.
As the wind whipped their gray beards and water streamed down oilskin ponchos, Ston and Tulen took advantage of their captive audience to tell tales of legendary battles.
It is expansive and well fenced, her landscape, the quiet acres of her mind, and with a soundtrack: the tapping of the rain, the swipping of her poncho against the branches, the tinny jangle of the carabiners swinging from her backpack.
She sat Valerius down on a barstool and then pulled out a large box of Mexican ponchos, before she grabbed several of them and wrapped Valerius in them.
Two mozos de campo, picturesque in great hats, with spurred bare heels, in white embroidered calzoneras, leather jackets and striped ponchos, rode ahead with carbines across their shoulders, swaying in unison to the pace of the horses.
English clothes were discarded for a more Chilian garb, including a poncho and a broad-leafed sombrero.
From Spitz, I recruited one Shepherd and one Doberman, and from a civilian boy, Bobby, I recruited Poncho, a fast, muscular Shepherd.
There was no difficulty with the other dogs, and Poncho seemed to be thrilled with his Marine Corps experience.
Staging Area The rain was falling harder and the wind was picking up, and Fagin stood waiting in it, his plastic poncho blown flat and wrinkled against his broad back.
A terrible fire, by the light of which I saw the last of the fighting, the llaneros flying, the Nationals throwing their arms down, and the miners of San Tome, all Indians from the Sierra, rolling by like a torrent to the sound of pipes and cymbals, green flags flying, a wild mass of men in white ponchos and green hats, on foot, on mules, on donkeys.
It contained his poncho of breathable grintlaskin and an Orcadian sweater.
As Casey folded up the ponchos she had dragged out of the shelter, she heard them talking about Pilikia and how he had been in a very bad mood by the time they found him last night.