lumberjacketed

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English[edit]

Adjective[edit]

lumberjacketed (not comparable)

  1. Alternative form of lumber-jacketed
    1. Wearing a lumberjacket.
      • 1963 January 12, “‘Boy Wonder’ Anka Seeks New Goals”, in Capital Journal, 75th year, number 11, Salem, Ore., section 3, page 7:
        Irvin Feld, Anka’s friend and manager, recalled escorting the lumberjacketed, blue-jeaned youngster backstage in an Ottawa theater in 1957 when Fats Domino, the show’s star, was getting ready to go on.
      • 1964 January 28, Steve Jacobson, “If You Look Hard, You See Progress”, in Newsday, volume 24, number 124, page 36 c:
        Lumberjacketed youths played baseball in the sunshine at Brookline Street and Park Ave. in Atlantic Beach yesterday, [].
      • 1971 January 24, S. L. Stebel, “Main St. in 1971: Coeur D’Alene, Idaho”, in Los Angeles Times, page 12:
        It would cost me 25 cents, the lumberjacketed driver said, and for that I could circle the town if I wanted [].
    2. Having a lumberjacket.
      • 1939 March 6, “Hearts and Dots”, in Fort Worth Star-Telegram, fifty-ninth year, number 34, Fort Worth, Tex., page nine:
        our favorite lumberjacketed dress
      • 1944 February 22, “Such Beautiful, Knowing Simplicity”, in The Indianapolis Star, volume 41, number 262, page 5:
        Lumberjacketed two-piece dress cut with a fluid, lovely ease; [].
      • 1946 August 8, Babette de Bary, “Campus Gives Sloppy Joe Heave Ho”, in Bergen Evening Record, volume 52, number 54 (total 15117), Hackensack, N.J., page twenty:
        Suits are being manufactured in classic campus styles as well as in the newer lumberjacketed models.
      • 1950 January 25, “A Toni Drake Fashion”, in Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, volume 45, number 175, page 10:
        With a lumberjacketed top buttoned close at the waist, wrist, with deep armholes.