Small-scale checkered design used in woven fabrics historically associated with the Anglo-Scottish Border country.
Woollen blanket or plaid woven in a pattern of small checks, worn as outerwear in southern Scotland and northern England.
Sinònims
Examples for "maud"
Examples for "maud"
1The captain looked grave; Mrs. Willoughby anxious; Beulah interested; and Maud thoughtful.
2She was in the dining-room; in the parlour Maud was practising music.
3The spectacled peer took in Lady Maud, and the men straggled in.
4Genevieve Maud reclined in a geranium-bed in an attitude of unstudied ease.
5Cork-based artist Maud Cotter wanted a combined living space and work studio.
1Trousers and waistcoat, shepherd's plaid; coat, dark blue cloth lined with sable.
2He had two caps, one of blue serge, the other of shepherd's plaid.
3One sentry tramps outside the door, and you pay your respects to the Governor in shepherd's plaid.
4They could scarcely believe their eyes, when they saw her riding by in a plain bonnet, and enveloped in a simple shepherd's plaid.
5Violet is wrapped in her shepherd's plaid, the corner twisted into a bewitching hood and surmounted by a cluster of black ribbon bows.
6In his short black coat, trousers of shepherd's plaid, and knotted white tie bearing a neat horseshoe pin, he looked smart yet soldierly.
7She wore a faded alpaca gown, patched here and there, a shawl of shepherd's plaid stained with the weather, and a nondescript bonnet.
8"Grey trousers and waistcoat, small shepherd's plaid, and he must have taken a greatcoat lined with Russian sable."
9"Oh, 'tain't so bad considering the H. C. of L.," put in a middle-aged man in a very tight Shepherd's plaid suit.