-
which they
often referred to as a "drape". Men's
redingote (1813) Man's
redingote (left) (1831)
Redingote croisée or double-breasted
frock coat (1837) Andrew...
-
habit could be a coat
dress called a
riding coat (borrowed in
French as
redingote) or a
petticoat with a
short jacket (often
longer in back than in front)...
-
simplified by
influences from Englishwomen's
country outdoors wear (thus the "
redingote" was the
French pronunciation of an
English "riding coat"), and from neo-classicism...
- (straw cape)
Opera coat
Overcoat Pea coat
Poncho Pants Raincoat Rain
pants Redingote Robe
Shawl Shirt Shrug Ski suit
Sleeved blanket Sport coat Sungl****es...
- In the 1840s, the
pelisse robe
became more
commonly referred to as a
redingote.
Depending on the
season and use of the pelisse, the
garment could be...
- some type of lace
kerchief worn
around the neck.
Another piece was the '
redingote',
halfway between a cape and an overcoat.
Accessories were also important...
- from the frock. In the
French language the
frock coat is
called 'une
redingote' (from
English "riding coat"), and so
unlike the
English language implies...
- eighteenth-century coat that
fastened down the
middle and
reached the hip
Redingote, an eighteenth-century ****ed
riding coat with a long
skirt down the back...
-
replacement statue of Napoléon in
modern dress (a
bicorn hat,
boots and a
redingote), however, was
erected by Louis-Philippe, and a better, more augustly...
-
cucaracha becoming English ****roach, and
English riding coat
becoming French redingote. Anglo-Indian
cuisine Folk
etymology Hanklyn-Janklin List of
English words...