释义 |
papillote|ˈpæpɪləʊt, -ɒt| Also 8 papillot, papilliot(e, 8–9 papillotte, 9 papilotte. [a. F. papillote (Mme de Sevigne a 1696), app. a verbal n. from *papilloter, a supposed deriv. of papillon butterfly.] 1. A curl-paper. Also fig.
1748H. Walpole Let. to H. S. Conway 6 Oct., I wish you could see him making squibs of his papillotes. 1778Refutation 19 The wild Devonia still on fashion doats, And turns thy satire into papillotes. 1797A. M. Bennett Beggar Girl (1813) III. 169 A papilliot having dropped from madame's tête. 1831Brewster Nat. Magic iii. (1833) 42 Her fingers were in active motion among the papillotes. 1848Thackeray Van. Fair xliii. 392 Glorvina, trembling with all the papillotes. 1860Queen Victoria Let. 3 Nov. in R. Fulford Dearest Child (1964) 278 We drove over..to Clifden which unfortunately was en papillote. 1959S. G. Flitman Craft of Ladies' Hairdressing viii. 74 For years the posticheur had used papilottes (small triangles of paper) to hold damp flat curls until they were dried. attrib.1845Stocqueler Handbk. Brit. India (1854) 80 A good supply of papillote paper. 1960Cunnington & Beard Dict. Eng. Costume 156/1 Papillotte comb.., a decorative comb of tortoise⁓shell. 1966J. S. Cox Illustr. Dict. Hairdressing 108/2 Papilotte tongs, pinching irons. 2. A paper wrapper, usu. greased, in which certain types of meat and fish are cooked or served.
1818T. Moore Fudge Fam. Paris v. 38 One's hair and one's cutlets both en papilotte. 1868M. Jewry Warne's Model Cookery 296/2 Wrap them [sc. mutton cutlets] in buttered papers... The fat of the dressed meat is absorbed in the papillotes. 1959R. Postgate Good Food Guide 1959–1960 109 Tamar salmon en papillotte, ham soufflé, or chicken à la crème, may appear on the menu. 1961Guardian 10 Mar. 10/6 Trout can..be grilled..in paper⁓bags (papillotes){ddd} first spread the inside of the papillote generously with maître d'hôtel batter. |