blazered

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

blazer +‎ -ed

Adjective[edit]

blazered (not comparable)

  1. Wearing a blazer.
    • 1983 March 28, William A. Henry III, “Hopeless Nights, Dreamless Days”, in Time:
      When first produced in New York, off-Broadway in 1980, the play seemed a programmatic denunciation of the social order, as personified by two pompous functionaries and by a blazered young prig who was passing through the slab room on his foreordained way up.
    • 2004, Alan Hollinghurst, chapter 6, in The Line of Beauty [], 1st US edition, New York, N.Y.: Bloomsbury Publishing, →ISBN:
      He stood back, with his hands still on Leo's shoulders, and smiled wanly at the pink-faced blazered boy.