Synonymer & Information om | Engelska ordet GREATCOAT


GREATCOAT

2

Antal bokstäver

9

Är palindrom

Nej

16
AT
ATC
CO
COA
EA
EAT
GR

2

2

636
AA
AAC


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Exempel på hur du använder GREATCOAT i en mening

  • Atkins, with his greatcoat on ready to go home, made no attempt to refute this analytical masterpiece but merely remarked with great deference: "I don't think we can play it quite like that!" and then beat a craven retreat "escorted by Club Officials".
  • A despatch runner advised that the long length of the greatcoat was impractical for the deep snow drifts when travelling between Mackinaw and Montreal and requested it be replaced by the shorter double-breasted style, which became known as the Mackinaw jacket.
  • German commodores also were permitted to wear greatcoat lapels and visor insignia of an admiral but were not officially members of the German admiralty.
  • Other coat styles typically featuring a double-breasted construction are the Guards Coat and the greatcoat styles of overcoats.
  • The kit consisted of a blue-grey ("air force blue") tunic and skirt, blue shirt, black necktie, greatcoat, rain coat, black shoes, navy blue cardigan, blue smock, overshoes, lisle grey stockings, gloves, khaki coveralls, grey shorts, tee shirt, summer dress, rank badges and a cap with a pleated crown.
  • The drape of the greatcoat reached to below the knee of the wearer, the short cape drapes to the elbow, and the capacious external pockets allow the wearer to carry dry food and other items; an example is the Petersham coat, named after Viscount Petersham.
  • The strip, often poking fun at newsworthy events as well as satirising comics counterculture, centres on a greatcoat brought to life sometime in the 1960s after being exposed to mind-enhancing drugs stuffed in its pockets.
  • Eventually the Rifles' commanding officer gave orders to discard knapsacks and keep either a greatcoat or blanket.
  • The soldier is dressed in his greatcoat, sheepskin jerkin (a sleeveless undercoat), and scarf, with his helmet pushed back and resting on his shoulders, and reading a letter from home.
  • Robert d'Harcourt describes the arrival of a prisoners' convoy coming from such a camp: "These men – these soldiers – marched, but they were dead; beneath each blue greatcoat was the head of a dead man: their eyes hollow, their cheekbones jutting out, their emaciated grimaces those of graveyard skulls".
  • Close-fitting white pantaloons, tucked into tall Hessian or riding boots were worn, often covered with grey wool and leather overalls on campaign, in addition to a dark blue, later grey, double-breasted greatcoat.
  • It depicts a First World War soldier, wearing boots, puttees, greatcoat and tin hat, sitting on an ammunition box, with downcast eyes, holding the barrel of his grounded rifle in his right hand.
  • The uniform was produced in two main versions - Summer weight, which is made from a lightweight cotton material, and was worn with the traditional Pilotka hat - and Winter weight, which is made from Wool Gaberdine, and worn with the Ushanka and often a ‘Shinel’ greatcoat.
  • The greatcoat was essentially the same but with a few modifications: the colour was now light grey with dark grey collar and cuffs, although there are examples of these - as well as chest tabs in some cases - also being made of the light grey material; waist pockets were removed and the back was cinched by a single half-belt with buttons; the coat seemed to vary in length with mosts reaching down to the ankle whilst some ended at about mid-calf.
  • Vera was unpretentious in her dress: in her cell she wore a white knee-length dress and a mobcap, to go to the temple she wore a lustrine jacket (in winter she wore an old cotton greatcoat), a cap and a shawl.


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