dunnage$23301$ - définition. Qu'est-ce que dunnage$23301$
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est dunnage$23301$ - définition

TALL-CROWNED HAT INITIALLY MADE OF BEAVER FELT AND LATER, OF SILK PLUSH
Stovepipe hat; Plug hats; Plug-hat; Top-hat; Top hats; Top hat (headgear); Tophat; Opera Hat; Plug hat; Tophats; Cylinder hat; Crush hat; Gibus (hat); Silk hat; Gibus; 🎩; George Dunnage; Chimneybot hat; Abraham Lincoln's hat; Abraham Lincoln hat; Chimney pot hat; Stove pipe hat
  • ca. 1910 top hat by Alfred Bertiel
  • [[Austin Lane Crothers]], 46th Governor of Maryland (1908–1912), wearing a top hat
  • Self portrait (c:a 1770) of [[Peter Falconet]] (1741–1791). One of the earliest depicted prototypes of what became the top hat. In early prototypes, a sash around the crown was closed by a [[buckle]]. This was later dropped, in the same way as shoe buckles for [[male pumps]] were replaced by bowties around the turn of the 19th century.
  • The collapsible '''Gibus'''
  • John Leech]], from: ''The Comic History of Rome'' by [[Gilbert Abbott à Beckett]], a top hat is placed in a deliberate [[anachronism]] on the head of the Ancient Roman reformer [[Tiberius Gracchus]], in order to compare him to 19th-century British politicians.
  • Grey top hat
  • European royalty ca. 1859
  • Illustration of a silk top hat in a 1915 U.S. advertisement.
  • [[Punxsutawney Phil]] is held aloft on [[Groundhog Day]] by a tophat-wearing member of the Inner Circle
  • date=December 2022}}

Colin Dunnage         
AUSTRALIAN POLITICIAN (1896-1969)
Colin Rosslyn Dunnage
Colin Rosslyn Dunnage (10 October 1896 – 7 November 1969) was an Australian politician who represented the South Australian House of Assembly seat of Unley from 1941 to 1962 for the Liberal and Country League.
dunnage         
  • Application of dunnage bags in container
  • Stabilizing capabilities of dunnage bags in container
INEXPENSIVE OR WASTE MATERIAL USED TO LOAD AND SECURE CARGO DURING TRANSPORTATION
['d?n?d?]
¦ noun
1. loose wood, matting, or similar material used to keep a cargo in position in a ship's hold.
2. informal baggage.
Origin
ME: of unknown origin.
Dunnage         
  • Application of dunnage bags in container
  • Stabilizing capabilities of dunnage bags in container
INEXPENSIVE OR WASTE MATERIAL USED TO LOAD AND SECURE CARGO DURING TRANSPORTATION
Dunnage is inexpensive or waste material used to load and secure cargo during transportation; more loosely, it refers to miscellaneous baggage, brought along during travel. The term can also refer to low-priority cargo used to fill out transport capacity which would otherwise ship underweight.

Wikipédia

Top hat

A top hat (also called a high hat, a cylinder hat, or, informally, a topper) is a tall, flat-crowned hat traditionally associated with formal wear in Western dress codes, meaning white tie, morning dress, or frock coat. Traditionally made of black silk or sometimes grey, the top hat emerged in Western fashion by the end of the 18th century. Although it declined by the time of the counterculture of the 1960s, it remains a formal fashion accessory. A collapsible variant of a top hat, developed in the 19th century, is known as an opera hat.

Perhaps inspired by the Early Modern era capotain, higher crowned dark felt hats with wide brims emerged as a country leisurewear fashion along with the Age of Revolution around the 1770s. Around the 1780s, the justaucorps was replaced by the previously casual frocks and dress coats. At the same time, the tricorne and bicorne hats were replaced by what became known as the top hat. By the 1790s, the directoire style dress coat with top hat was widely introduced as citywear for the upper and middle classes in all urban areas of the Western world. The justaucorps was replaced in all but the most formal court affairs. Around the turn of the 19th century, although for a few decades beaver hats were popular, black silk became the standard, sometimes varied by grey ones. While the dress coats were replaced by the frock coat from the 1840s as conventional formal daywear, top hats continued to be worn with frock coats as well as with what became known as formal evening wear white tie. Towards the end of the 19th century, whereas the white tie with black dress coat remained fixed, frock coats were gradually replaced by morning dress, along with top hats.

After World War I, the 1920s saw widespread introduction of semi-formal black tie and informal wear suits that were worn with less formal hats such as bowler hats, homburgs, boaters and fedoras respectively, in established society. After World War II, white tie, morning dress and frock coats along with their counterpart, the top hat, started to become confined to high society, politics and international diplomacy. The last United States presidential inaugurations with top hat was the inauguration of John F. Kennedy in 1961. Following the counterculture of the 1960s, its use declined further along with the disuse also of daily informal hats by men.

Yet, along with traditional formal wear, the top hat continues to be applicable for the most formal occasions, including weddings and funerals, in addition to certain audiences, balls and horse racing events, such as the Royal Enclosure at Royal Ascot and the Queen's Stand of Epsom Derby. It also remains part of the formal dress of those occupying prominent positions in certain traditional British institutions, such as the Bank of England, certain City stock exchange officials, occasionally at the Law Courts and Lincoln's Inn, judges of the Chancery Division and King's Counsel, boy-choristers of King's College Choir, dressage horseback riders, and servants' or doormen's livery.

As part of traditional formal wear, in popular culture the top hat has sometimes been associated with the upper class, and used by satirists and social critics as a symbol of capitalism or the world of business, as with the Monopoly Man or Scrooge McDuck. The top hat also forms part of the traditional dress of Uncle Sam, a symbol of the United States, generally striped in red, white and blue. Furthermore, ever since the famous "Pulling a Rabbit out of a Hat" of Louis Comte in 1814, the top hat remains associated with hat tricks and stage magic costumes.