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frock
[ frok ]
noun
- a gown or dress worn by a girl or woman.
- a loose outer garment worn by peasants and workers; smock.
- a coarse outer garment with large sleeves, worn by monks.
verb (used with object)
- to provide with, or clothe in, a frock.
- to invest with priestly or clerical office.
frock
/ frɒk /
noun
- a girl's or woman's dress
- a loose garment of several types, such as a peasant's smock
- a coarse wide-sleeved outer garment worn by members of some religious orders
verb
- tr to invest (a person) with the office or status of a cleric
Other Words From
- frockless adjective
- under·frock noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of frock1
Word History and Origins
Origin of frock1
Example Sentences
One reason he endures is because a lot of the society we see is Grace Kelly in beautiful frocks and Cary Grant in gorgeous suits in cocktail world drawing rooms.
It is summer in the Midwest, hot as soup, and I don a frock the size of a twin bed sheet in cooling cotton.
Ministers publicly describe the fuss over frocks and football tickets as a "distraction" - a word politicians like to use when they are describing something they know is embarrassing and find hard to explain.
Given the “Garden of Time” theme and the last-minute nature of her frock, could we be in for a living garment in the form of flowers?
Then here came the tailors for Mr. Cranston’s frock coat and morning coat and striped trousers and silk nightshirts with his initials sewed on.
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