dinner jacket - meaning and definition. What is dinner jacket
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What (who) is dinner jacket - definition

DINNER SUIT, TUXEDO
Dinner jacket; User:SPUI/Antarctic toilet paper holder; Dinner suit; TUX; Black Tie; Tuxedos; Tuxedoes; Monkey suit; Blacktie; Tuxedo; Tuxedo (clothing); Esmoquin; Black tie event; Black-tie event; Black-tie; Soup and fish; Penguin suit; 🤵; Cravate noir; Tux; Dinner coat
  • Waistcoat with shawl collar, closed with studs
  • Cocktail party in 1936
  • mother-of-pearl]] inlay in a gold setting
  • silk grosgrain]] facings
  • An example of a link front style closure of a dinner jacket, featuring silk grosgrain
  • Covered cuff buttons on a dinner jacket
  • full dress]] accessories, including white [[waist coat]].
  • Black tie trousers with a side stripe
  • evening dress]] or dinner dress
  • [[Jacob Rees-Mogg]] in black tie debating at The Cambridge Union
  • A white dinner jacket
  • An example of a black evening gown
  • Miniature medals with black tie
  • The elements of gentleman's black tie
  • A modern attached wing collar, of the half-collar shape, with longer wings than a typical attached wing collar, and pre-tied bow tie
  • their wedding]]
  • Black tie worn at a dinner party in the 1940s
  • [[Button hole flower]] with a white pocket square

dinner jacket         
also dinner-jacket (dinner jackets)
A dinner jacket is a jacket, usually black, worn by men for formal social events. (BRIT; in AM, use tuxedo
)
N-COUNT
dinner jacket         
¦ noun a man's short jacket without tails, typically a black one, worn with a bow tie for formal evening occasions.
Flight jacket         
  • B-17 bomber]] in WWII
  • Baseball bomber jacket 1980s-style summer
  • Richard Byrd]] in flight jacket, 1920s
CASUAL JACKET ORIGINALLY WORN BY AVIATORS
Flight Jacket; Bomber jacket; Flying jacket; B-3 jacket; Aviator jacket
A flight jacket is a casual jacket that was originally created for pilots and eventually became part of popular culture and apparel. It has evolved into various styles and silhouettes, including the "letterman" jacket and the fashionable "bomber" jacket that is known today.

Wikipedia

Black tie

Black tie is a semi-formal Western dress code for evening events, originating in British and American conventions for attire in the 19th century. In British English, the dress code is often referred to synecdochically by its principal element for men, the dinner suit or dinner jacket. In American English, the equivalent term tuxedo (or tux) is common. The dinner suit is a black, midnight blue or white two- or three-piece suit, distinguished by satin or grosgrain jacket lapels and similar stripes along the outseam of the trousers. It is worn with a white dress shirt with standing or turndown collar and link cuffs, a black bow tie, typically an evening waistcoat or a cummerbund, and black patent leather dress shoes or court pumps. Accessories may include a semi-formal homburg, bowler, or boater hat. For women, an evening gown or other fashionable evening attire may be worn.

The first dinner jacket is traditionally traced to 1865 on the then Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII (1841–1910). The late 19th century saw gradual introduction of the lounge jacket without tails as a less formal and more comfortable leisure alternative to the frock coat. Similarly, the shorter dinner jacket evolved as a less formal alternative to the dress coat out of the informal smoking jacket, itself derived from out of the banyan. Thus in many non-English languages, a dinner jacket is still known as the false friend "smoking". In American English, its synonym "tuxedo" was derived from the village of Tuxedo Park in New York State, where it was introduced in 1886 following the example of Europeans. Following the counterculture of the 1960s, black tie has increasingly replaced white tie for more formal settings in the United States, along with cultures influenced by American culture.

Traditionally worn only for events after 6 p.m., black tie is less formal than white tie but more formal than informal or business dress. As semi-formal, black tie are worn for dinner parties (public, fraternities, private) and sometimes even to balls and weddings, although etiquette experts discourage wearing of black tie for weddings. Traditional semi-formal day wear equivalent is black lounge suit. Supplementary semi-formal alternatives may be accepted for black tie: mess dress uniform, religious clothing (such as cassock), folk costumes (such as highland dress), etc.

Examples of use of dinner jacket
1. My Dad, however, is being difficult, refusing to wear a dinner jacket.
2. One man wore a black velvet dinner jacket and a single pearl earring.
3. In 1'66, Yves Saint Laurent introduced Le Smoking, a classic three–button dinner jacket for women.
4. But they are still suspicious of a man who refuses to wear a dinner jacket.
5. Perhaps I could borrow a dinner jacket from one of the staff?