Put on special clothes to appear particularly appealing and attractive.
Sinónimos
Examples for "attire"
Examples for "attire"
1The couples left the dining area to shop for their new attire.
2This was a grave, smooth-faced individual in the attire of a notary.
3Three armed figures in battle-stained attire picked their way among the bodies.
4But we also don't need to bar otherwise accepted contemporary business attire.
5The guests were escorted to the bar area in their new attire.
1No woman should overdress in her own house; it is the worst taste.
2A bodice and overdress of white cretonne flowered with red roses.
3It's not the dress, she said, taking the overdress off.
4Colonial overdress and bodice of white, brocaded with pale-blue roses.
5You never want to be at a party underdressed, so I always tend to overdress.
1That's not even getting into what your prink government used to do.
2In flowers that prink the earth, and stars that gem the skies.
3We'll miss it all if you stop to prink.
4Now you go and prink up for dinner.
5You don't know how to prink, do you?
1We'll talk tomorrow; I'll call you as soon as I get up.
2He wanted to get up but she said: 'Sit where you are.
3What time did they get up, arrive home from work, have dinner?
4I saw Shifty Schiff get up yesterday and say this is Russia.
5Tesla has said the new Cybertruck will get up to 500 miles.
1I've kind of always liked to rig out swell when I could.
2Get a good rig out, so as to appear to advantage.
3With this load he went to the roadside and began to rig out a fence-post.
4We must rig out a cot for it there.
5Up with the royals and rig out stun'-sails, Mr Wilson, (to the mate).
2Meet me about half-past seven, Walter, up in the room, all togged up.
3It was Del Mar, all togged up and carrying a magazine in his hand.
4Observe my lady in curl-papers and my lady togged up for a dinner party.
5Probably a football player never had more assistance in togging up for a game.
1Later at about 4.30 p.m. he will tog out for hockey practice with the under-14s.
2Today marks the first time we, the Irish women's rugby team, will tog out to play in our own national rugby stadium.
3The Irish players tog out in men's and mixed gender teams, with two teams carrying European Champions titles into this bigger arena.
4In silk, with a trademark Latin, the plutocrat's wife appears, and I can afford but satin to tog out my dimpled dears.
5Wee winter sports fans can tog out in baby snow suits, mini goggles and the wonderfully warm and waterproof Molehill Snow Mocs (left).
1Tis the season to dress up your home with the season's best.
2Look, maybe he just wanted to dress up the discovery a bit.
3Any effort to dress up would have simply been in vain, anyway.
4I asked incredulously, mentally sorting through our box of dress up clothes.
5While you've been playing dress up, I've come up with a plan.
1A man was working his way from the deck up into the rigging.
2He twisted it and pulled the back deck up without allowing himself to think.
3Just at this moment there seemed to be some excitement on the deck up forward.
4He picked the deck up fondly, while a faraway look came into his clouded eyes.
5Even though ops was only one deck up, the three-meter climb might as well have been a thousand.
1No need to gussy up the place -we won't be staying long.
2You don't gussy up a zen garden with autumn ferns.
3They make pretty patterns on a whole ham ready for roasting, and can gussy up an otherwise plain apple tart.
4Each represents an effort to gussy up the raw economics of land development with the comforting, familiar tropes of the knowledge economy.
5Julie Delpy's My Zoe isn't nearly so enchanting, but it does gussy up a ludicrous narrative with proper acting and meringue-soft science fiction.
1And I fancy up to now she has had her own way in everything.
2You can fancy up my excuse, or think up one of your own-I don't care which.
3And look at you, all fancied up and haristocratic, I see.
4Haymitch and Effie are all fancied up for the occasion.
5There goes the chief, Terry, all fancied up like a bathroom on a German liner!
1But I know you've got one more trick up your sleeve: 10.
2I learned the trick up in New England, where I come from.
3I had no plans, no schemes, no last trick up my sleeve.
4But he can't keep the trick up because the trick isn't working.
5Was Karlov afraid or had he some new trick up his sleeve?
1They were usually fifteen and sixteen hours below deck out of the twenty-four.
2I think I heard the deck out there collapse during the Big Rumble.
3She wasn't on the deck out back or on the beach with the others.
4Get Richard there up the ladder and you be on the big deck out back.
5NewsImageFile: The Celebrity Solstice is well decked out for a relaxing holiday.
1So they had to leave that trick out of the second act.
2It takes upward of 1 hour to trick out Eisenhower's Lincoln.
3Matt: OK, so just pulling every trick out of the bag?
4If we could find that trick out and take it back with us!
5A new paint job and custom sounds trick out the machine with Halo flair.
1Hermoine pushed a tray of honeyed figs out of a slave's hands.
2I knew he wasn't figged out for nothing, put in Jock.
3Why, I am figged out like a princess, and I never wear sabots now.
4Well, and ain't they figged out!
5It was not in the least to blame; and it seems most unreasonable to have expected it to bear figs out of season.
6"Oh, I guess not," said the boy, as he sat down on a tin cracker box and began to eat figs out of a box.