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kersey
[ kur-zee ]
noun
, plural ker·seys.
- a heavy overcoating of wool or wool and cotton, similar to beaver and melton.
- a coarse twilled woolen cloth with a cotton warp, used especially for work clothes.
- a garment made of kersey.
kersey
/ ˈkɜːzɪ /
noun
- a smooth woollen cloth used for overcoats, etc
- a twilled woollen cloth with a cotton warp
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Word History and Origins
Origin of kersey1
1400–50; late Middle English; perhaps after Kersey, in Suffolk, England
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Word History and Origins
Origin of kersey1
C14: probably from Kersey, village in Suffolk
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Example Sentences
When I called, the Jackie Joyner Kersey Foundation answered.
From The Daily Beast
Hence Kersey, by a misprint, gives 'cherisaunei, comfort'; which Chatterton adopted.
From Project Gutenberg
"We has a bolt o' moleskin and a bolt o' kersey cloth," said Mrs. Twig.
From Project Gutenberg
One of the groomes of your wardrobe, come, uncase, uncase; byr Lady a good Kersey.
From Project Gutenberg
It is named from an English town, Kersey, where from the eleventh to the fifteenth century a large woolen trade was carried on.
From Project Gutenberg
Beaver—Similar to Kersey, but with a longer nap, soft, thick nap inside.
From Project Gutenberg
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