extraneous coat - tradução para árabe
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extraneous coat - tradução para árabe

COAT MADE OF HEAVY, COARSE WOOLEN FABRIC WITH TOGGLE CLOSURES
Duffel Coat; Duffle Coat; Toggle coat; Duffle coat
  • A [[Royal Navy]] officer wearing a duffel coat aboard a destroyer on convoy protection duties, 1942
  • Toggle fastenings
  • A contemporary duffle-style coat
  • Scottish singer [[Alex Kapranos]] in a contemporary duffel coat
  • Dutch princesses in duffel coats, as a statement, shortly after World War II

extraneous coat      
‎ الغِلاَلَةُ الخارِجِيَّةُ للخَلاَيا‎
white coat         
  • Viral & Human Genomics Laboratory (Facultad de Medicina UASLP) team members using Howie lab coats.
LIGHTWEIGHT WHITE SMOCK OR COAT TRADITIONALLY WORN OVER STREET DRESS OR SCRUBS BY DOCTORS, TECHNICIANS, AND SCIENTISTS
White coats; Lab coat; Laboratory coat; Labcoat; White coater; White-coat; White-coats; White laboratory coat; Laboratory Coat; User:Prokayotae/sandbox; 🥼; Lab coats
‎ الغِلاَلَةُ البَيضاء‎
duffle coat         
معطف واق من المطر

Definição

duffel coat
also duffle coat (duffel coats)
A duffel coat is a heavy coat with a hood and long buttons that fasten with loops.
N-COUNT

Wikipédia

Duffel coat

A duffel coat (also duffle coat) is a coat made from duffel cloth, designed with toggle-and-rope fastenings, patched pockets and a large hood. The name derives from Duffel, a town in the province of Antwerp in Belgium where the manufacturing process of this kind of fabric, a coarse, thick, woolen cloth originated. Duffel bags were originally made from the same material.

As the hood and toggle fastenings from Polish frocks proved popular, the frock spread across Europe by the 1850s. By 1890 a less sophisticated version was being supplied to the British Royal Navy, from various manufacturers. During World War II all British troops wore the coat, among them Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery and Lieutenant-Colonel Sir David Sterling. After the war, the coats became available in England as government surplus stock and became popular, especially with students. In countries freed by British troops from Nazi-German occupation, wearing the coat also meant a tribute to all troopers that fought in the war and a statement to civilian freedom.