A sleeveless dress resembling an apron; worn over other clothing.
1I would thrive in some kindly Shaker community, in a bonnet and a long pinny.
2THEN she took something else off a clothes-horse-"Thatisn't my pinny?"
3Har-yes ,Mr.Harry-( awoman'spinny hand,-the man's wife, I'll wager)-Aye-Mr.
4Mrs. Ellis played with the edge of her pinny, twisting the fabric nervously in her fingers.
5You'd look very fetching in your pinny.
6Bar this money I've hardly a pinny.
7Three handkins and a pinny!
8And he did too, every pinny of it, and the horse was beat on the post by a short head.
9Then, he'd hardly have got to 10 Downing Street thrice if he'd been focused on the pinny and the duster.
10Meantime, Ahab holding the letter, muttered, Mr. Har-yes, Mr. Harry-( awoman'spinny hand,-the man's wife, I'll wager)-Aye-Mr.
11Presently, from his discreet distance, he saw the mother-child going down the road toward Tod's, in her blue 'pinny' and corn-colored hair.
12Boy, with his "pinny" on, ran off in glee to make himself promiscuously useful, and I sat down to plan an attack.
13To her left were soccer nets, field hockey pinnies, and extra lacrosse sticks.
14Prince, or Pinny, as we call him, plays some funny tricks.
15Adding to the overall schoolyard ambiance, the candidates wear pinnies.
16Pinny is more artful about it than the rest.