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View synonyms for toque

toque

[ tohk ]

noun

  1. a brimless and close-fitting hat for women, in any of several shapes.
  2. a velvet hat with a narrow, sometimes turned-up brim, a full crown, and usually a plume, worn by men and women especially in 16th-century France.
  3. a tall white hat with pleats, worn by chefs.


toque

/ təʊk /

noun

  1. a woman's small round brimless hat, popular esp in Edwardian times
  2. a hat with a small brim and a pouched crown, popular in the 16th century
  3. same as tuque
  4. a chef's tall white hat
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of toque1

First recorded in 1495–1505; from French; replacing earlier toock, towk (from Portuguese touca “coif ”), tock, tocque (from Italian tocca “cap”), and toke (from Spanish toca “headdress”); further origin uncertain
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Word History and Origins

Origin of toque1

C16: from French, from Old Spanish toca headdress, probably from Basque tauka hat
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Example Sentences

Other pieces in the collection, which ranges from $275 to $1,350, are a toque, reversible fleece jacket and reversible vest.

Outside, men chatted around a large metal wood-burning cooker with a stove pipe, two wearing chef’s toques.

When I was nine, for instance, I received an Emeril Lagasse-branded miniature chef’s uniform, complete with a starchy white coat and toque.

From Salon

Indeed, their cable car scenes don’t measure up to Mount Rainier, elevation 14,410 feet, when it wears a fluffy toque.

They demanded the proposal be discarded and toque macaque habitats be protected.

From Reuters

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