释义 |
Definition of siren suit in English: siren suitnoun A one-piece garment for the whole body which is easily put on or taken off, originally designed for use in air-raid shelters. Example sentencesExamples - The war had a dramatic effect on women's fashion. Women started to compromise by wearing overalls, dungarees, trousers, siren suits and making their own clothes.
- I never gave it much thought, but if I had to describe a grandfather he would have been a loving and much-loved man, dressed in a siren suit.
- Our siren suits were made of army surplus blankets and occasionally there was parachute silk to make underwear.
- See inside the many and varied views of the great war leader who became renowned for his fondness for cigars, siren suits, hats and victory salutes.
- We would get up in the middle of the night, I would be dressed in my specially made purple siren suit and we then went down into the shelter.
- It became routine for Mum to get us into our siren suits and tuck us up into the bunk in the shelter each night.
- Churchill broadcasted to the nation in his famous ‘siren suit’.
- We were snug in our siren suits and were quietly playing, with one ear on the bangs, bumps and thuds that seemed to grow nearer.
- The girl dressed in what pre-war we would have called a boiler suit and would later be described as a siren suit.
- Winston Churchill started the fashion for siren suits.
- Until the mid-1960s the siren suits were sewn in blue or red cotton or poplin with flannel lining.
- They had only the clothes they stood up in, which were green siren suits.
- During the war military styling influenced the women's fashion; they wore anything from trousers to one-piece siren suits.
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