英:['mɒbkæp]
美:['mɒbˌkæp]
英:['mɒbkæp]
美:['mɒbˌkæp]
mob·cap
mab kaep
mob woman's cap + cap
The first known use of mobcap was in 1785
1 Those at Zehnder’s dress in the restaurant’s colonial theme, with women in mobcaps and white aprons, and men in banded-collared shirts with knickers.
2 After the usual handwashing, putting on of mobcaps and coats, and wiping our feet on mats for disinfecting, we stepped into the high-ceilinged room where the vertical farm was humming away.
3 "All be ready, mistress," she said in a slow voice, solemnly nodding her enormous mobcap while she spoke.
4 “Only housemaids don’t wear gloves and all-over aprons and mobcaps,” replied Mollie.
5 In her later years Mary is said to have worn a mobcap and kerchief.
6 Further on we have a glimpse of Jane and her sister in their mobcaps, young still, but dressed soberly beyond their years.
7 Technicians in white coats who wear white sanitary mobcaps on their heads walk around quietly.
8 Lastly, she was dressed in a black silk gown and white mobcap.
9 A mobcap was a frilly white cap introduced from France.
10 Some of these workers are young guys who also have mobcaps on their beards.
11 But in the 1860s, the British upper classes required their maids to wear a common uniform: a white mobcap, an apron, and a simple black dress.
1 头巾式女帽