- A
kabney (Dzongkha: བཀབ་ནེ་, Wylie: bkab-ne) is a silk
scarf worn as a part of the gho, the
traditional male
attire in Bhutan. It is raw silk, normally...
-
Bhutanese honorific that is
bestowed upon individuals,
along with a red
scarf kabney, by the Druk Gyalpo. In
common practice, however, many
senior government...
- སྐེད་རགས་, romanized: sked rags). On
festive occasions, it is worn with a
kabney. The
government of
Bhutan requires all men to wear the gho if they work...
- Buddhism.
Aside from the King of Bhutan, only the Je
Khenpo may don a
saffron kabney.
According to the dual
system of
government established by
Ngawang Namgyal...
-
dress as
formal attire.
Varicolored scarves,
known as
rachu for
women and
kabney for men, are
important indicators of
social standing, as
Bhutan has traditionally...
- However,
while visiting the
Dzong or
monastery a long
scarf or stoll,
called Kabney is worn by men
across the shoulder, in
colours appropriate to
their ranks...
-
Dragon King of Bhutan,
whose royal garb
traditionally includes a
yellow kabney (scarf). The
orange half
signifies Buddhist spiritual tradition, particularly...
- "His
Majesty confers Dakyen to PM,
appoints ministers and
grants Orange Kabney to Speaker, OL - BBS". 7
November 2018. His
Majesty confers Lungmar Scarf...
-
under the
driglam namzha laws. Part of the
traditional dress includes the
kabney, a long
scarf whose coloring is regulated. Only the King of
Bhutan and Chief...
- kamiz, orna,
kurtee (female)
Bhutan –
Ngalop people: Gho, kera, toego,
kabney (male) and kira, wonju,
rachus (female)
India – Achkan, sherwani, dhoti...