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corduroy
[kawr-duh-roi, kawr-duh-roi]
noun
a cotton-filling pile fabric with lengthwise cords or ridges.
corduroys, trousers made of this fabric.
adjective
of, relating to, or resembling corduroy.
constructed of logs laid together transversely, as a road across swampy ground.
verb (used with object)
to form (a road or the like) by laying logs transversely.
to make a corduroy road across or along.
corduroy
/ ˌkɔːdəˈrɔɪ, ˈkɔːdəˌrɔɪ /
noun
See also corduroys
a heavy cotton pile fabric with lengthways ribs
( as modifier )
a corduroy coat
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of corduroy1
Example Sentences
The rocker walked on stage alone, hunched over with his face obscured by a corduroy cap, to play a hushed acoustic version of the classic Sugar Mountain.
These pleated pinstripe corduroy trousers are a contemporary classic.
Kings Starter jacket, the ribbed corduroy from the house shoes her dad would buy at the swap meet, a quilted inside that draws from the iconographic element of a Chanel bag.
Dressed in pink corduroys, a black hoodie and white sneakers, he was charming and sweet, jokey one second and quietly reflective the next.
Explaining the absence of Wes Anderson, who won best live action short for “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar,” Kimmel noted that Anderson was at home, “building a diorama out of corduroy.”
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