| 单词 | milliner | 
| 释义 | millinern.ΘΚΠ the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of Europe > the Italians > 			[noun]		 > native or inhabitant of Italy > other Italian towns Genowayc1400 Neapolitanc1425 Venetian1432 milliner1449 Milanese1484 Genevois1521 Genoeses1553 Pisan1559 Ferrarese1573 Florentine1591 Paduana1592 Amalfitan1600 Bergamask1602 Genovese1603 Genoan1608 Salernitan1608 Patavine1611 Vicentine1611 White Moors1617 Perugian1620 Genoesian1624 Lucchese1660 Veronese1673 Modenese1711 Pavian1712 Sienese1756 Patavinian1771 Livornese1789 Bolognese1818 Torinese1864 Assisian1870 Triestine1905 Luccan1911 Padovan1953 Cassinese1957 1449    Rolls of Parl. V. 144/2  				That every Venician, Italian..Milener..and all other Merchants straungiers..paye to you..vi s. viii d. ?1530    J. Rastell Pastyme of People sig. *Fvi  				He was incountered by the Mylleners and the Venicyans. 1570    B. Googe tr.  T. Kirchmeyer Popish Kingdome  ii. f. 18v  				Some tell againe the Turkes affayres, or of the Emprours warres, Of Spaine, of Fraunce, of Uenice, or of lustie Myllanarres. 1604    T. Dekker  & T. Middleton Honest Whore  i. ii. 32  				You knowe we Millaners loue to strut vpon Spanish leather. 1828    W. Scott Fair Maid of Perth xi, in  Chron. Canongate 2nd Ser. I. 295  				The Milaner shall not know my work [on a Milan hauberk] from his own. 1871    Ladies' Repository Sept. 163/2  				Mediolanum, the old Roman city of the ‘half-fleecy sow’, in process of time, became Milano, the city of milaners or milliners.  2.  Originally: a seller of fancy wares, accessories, and articles of (female) apparel, esp. such as were originally made in Milan. Subsequently: spec. a person who designs, makes, or sells women's hats. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > trader > traders or dealers in specific articles > 			[noun]		 > in textiles, clothing, or yarns > in hats hatter1212 hurrer1403 milliner1530 haberdasher1566 man-milliner1787 society > trade and finance > selling > seller > sellers of specific things > 			[noun]		 > seller of trimmings or tape milliner1530 haberdasher1611 inkle-beggar1616 the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > making headgear > 			[noun]		 > millinery > milliner milliner1713 millineress1802 1530    in  N. H. Nicolas Privy Purse Expences Henry VIII 		(1827)	 33  				Paied to the Mylloner for certeyne cappes trymmed..withe botons of golde. 1531    in  N. H. Nicolas Privy Purse Expences Henry VIII 		(1827)	 173  				Paied to xp̃ofer mylloner for ij myllain bonettes. 1531    in  N. H. Nicolas Privy Purse Expences Henry VIII 		(1827)	 174  				Paied to the mylloner for a knif for the king. 1573    in  P. Cunningham Acct. Revels at Court 		(1842)	 24  				To the Millioner for one yard qtr of counterfete cloth of gold. 1581    Compendious Exam. Certayne Ordinary Complaints ii. f. 37v  				Mercers, Grocers, Vintners, Haberdashers, Milleners, and such as do sell wares growing beyond the sea. 1592    R. Greene Quip for Vpstart Courtier sig. G4v  				The other a Frenchman and a Myllaner in saint Martins, and sels shirts, bandes, bracelets, Iewels, and such pretty toies for Gentle women. a1616    W. Shakespeare Winter's Tale 		(1623)	  iv. iv. 193  				No Milliner can so fit his customers with  Gloues.       View more context for this quotation 1617    J. Minsheu Ἡγεμὼν είς τὰς γλῶσσας: Ductor in Linguas at Habberdasher  				An Habberdasher of small wares... In London also called a Millenier, à Lat: mille, i. a thousand, as one hauing a thousand small wares to sell. 1693    N. Luttrell Diary in  Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs 		(1857)	 III. 7  				Two [highwaymen] are said to be tradesmen in the Strand, one a goldsmith, th'other a milliner. 1713    J. Gay in  Guardian 1 Sept. 2/1  				The Milliner must be thoroughly versed in Physiognomy; in the Choice of Ribbons she must have a particular regard to the Complexion. 1741    S. Richardson Pamela IV. xlv. 280  				Tailors, Wigpuffers, and Milaners. 1797    J. Robinson Directory of Sheffield 56  				Calton, Godfrey, haberdasher, and milliner. 1827    W. Wordsworth in  N. C. Smith Lit. Crit. 		(1905)	 258  				He [sc. T. Moore] is too lavish of brilliant ornament. His poems smell of the perfumer's and milliner's shops. 1884    West. Daily Press 29 May 3/7  				A black butterfly is unknown to entomologists, but at present is a favourite insect with milliners. 1911    H. S. Harrison Queed 151  				There is your public, the readers of the Post—shop-clerks, stenographers,..drummers, milliners. 1986    A. Brookner Misalliance x.153  				Her life at home with Mother, who had, surprisingly, been a designer of hats and a court milliner. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). millinerv. Now rare.   transitive. To make up (articles of women's clothing, esp. hats). Also in extended use. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > making headgear > make headgear			[verb (transitive)]		 > make women's headgear milliner1867 1867    Atlantic Monthly Apr. 510/2  				We would not have Poesy to be greatly millinered, whatever fashions other ladies may adopt; and when we meet her corseted in the iron framework of the sonnet's rhymes,..we long to see her in any other attire. 1885    G. B. Shaw Cashel Byron's Profession 		(1886)	 iii. 34  				We will go to Paris, and be millinered there. 1895    G. B. Shaw in  Sat. Rev. 5 Oct. 438/2  				The displays of fashionable life..are now millinered and tailored..by the artists and tradesmen who equip the real fashionable world. 1907    in  C. W. Cunnington Eng. Women's Clothing 		(1952)	 ii. 79  				A modified cloche ‘millinered’ in a light rough-surfaced cloth. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < | 
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