KIMONOS - meaning and definition. What is KIMONOS
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is KIMONOS - definition

JAPANESE TRADITIONAL GARMENT
Kimonos; Haorri; Kimono-hiyoku layering; Hiyoku; Uchikake; Hōmongi; Obi-ita; 着物; Kimono-hiyoku-layering; Datejime; Homongi; Nagajuban; 👘; Kitsuke; Jinbaori; Kimonon; Nagajubans; Shiromuku
  • kitsuke}} standards for women, which promoted a neater, more standardised appearance.
  • yukata}} decorated with spider chrysanthemums and dragonflies respectively
  • katsugi}} style.
  • Hōmongi}}
  • Iromuji}}
  • cranes]], from the [[Khalili Collection of Kimono]]
  • Kimono for a young woman, depicting a boat on swirling water, with pine tree, plum blossoms and maples. Japan, 1912–1926. From the [[Khalili Collection of Kimono]]
  • [[tanmono]]}}
  • tanmono}}
  • alt=A young woman stood up in a dark blue long-sleeved kimono with a white designs across the lap and the middle of the sleeves. The sash she wears is orange with a thin green belt in the centre
  • komon}} with a small, repeating floral pattern
  • 165x165px
  • kosode}} (left) and a modern-day kimono (right).
  • kurotomesode}} with three crests and longer sleeves.
  • edo komon}} pattern is stencil-dyed onto the fabric.
  • 1800}}; the areas likely to have been damaged are made in another colour. Paper and silk.
  • obi}}, the sleeves, and the style of wearing multiple layered kimono. ([[Utagawa Kuniyoshi]], ''Plum Blossoms at Night'', woodblock print, 19th century)
  • haori}}
  • Couple being married in formal traditional dress
  • Fukuoka City]] Hall
  • kurotomesode}}-type pattern on the kimono's elongated skirt
  • Tsukesage}}
  • tsunokakushi}} (wedding headpiece)
  • irotomesode}} dating to the 1920s displaying a mirrored skirt pattern (the same garment as in the wedding image at the top of the page)

Kimonos         
·add. ·pl of Kimono.
kimono         
[k?'m??n??]
¦ noun (plural kimonos) a long, loose robe having wide sleeves and tied with a sash, originally worn as a formal garment in Japan.
Derivatives
kimonoed adjective
Origin
C17: Japanese, from ki 'wearing' + mono 'thing'.
kimono         
(kimonos)
A kimono is an item of Japanese clothing. It is long, shaped like a coat, and has wide sleeves.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Kimono

The kimono (きもの/着物, lit.'thing to wear') is a traditional Japanese garment and the national dress of Japan. The kimono is a wrapped-front garment with square sleeves and a rectangular body, and is worn left side wrapped over right, unless the wearer is deceased. The kimono is traditionally worn with a broad sash, called an obi, and is commonly worn with accessories such as zōri sandals and tabi socks.

Kimono have a set method of construction and are typically made from a long, narrow bolt of cloth known as a tanmono, though Western-style fabric bolts are also sometimes used. There are different types of kimono for men, women, and children, varying based on the occasion, the season, the wearer's age, and – less commonly in the modern day – the wearer's marital status. Despite the kimono's reputation as a formal and difficult-to-wear garment, there are types of kimono suitable for both formal and informal occasions. The way a person wears their kimono is known as kitsuke (着付け, lit.'dressing').

Though previously the most common Japanese garment, the kimono in the present day has fallen out of favour and is rarely worn as everyday dress. Kimono are now most frequently seen at summer festivals, where people frequently wear the yukata, the most informal type of kimono; however, more formal types of kimono are also worn to funerals, weddings, graduations, and other formal events. Other people who commonly wear kimono include geisha and maiko, who are required to wear it as part of their profession, and rikishi, or sumo wrestlers, who must wear kimono at all times in public.

Despite the low number of people who wear kimono regularly and the garment's reputation as a complicated article of clothing, the kimono has experienced a number of revivals in previous decades, and is still worn today as fashionable clothing in Japan.

Examples of use of KIMONOS
1. "I am making kimonos more cheaply, but they are not cheap kimonos," Kawamura said.
2. "The women, and men too, would come to Nishijin in kimonos to order more kimonos," he said.
3. "Almost all of them are making kimonos in China, or else using electric looms.
4. Twenty–five years ago, production of Nishijin kimonos and obi –– elaborate kimono sashes –– was thriving, with highflying Tokyo businessmen purchasing $25,000 kimonos for wives and lovers like so many boxes of roses.
5. Like blue jeans in America, kimonos increasingly are not being made in Japan at all.