| 释义 | 
		Definition of niqab in English: niqabnoun nɪˈkɑːbnəˈkɑb A veil worn by some Muslim women in public, covering all of the face apart from the eyes.  Example sentencesExamples -  Soon, Azza went further and put on the niqab, the veil that covers a woman's face below the eyes.
 -  The plaintiff holds a sincere religious belief that she should wear the niqab in front of all strangers and unrelated Muslim men.
 -  The tack taken by the majority of posters supporting her right to have a license while in niqab is that as a profession of her religious faith, the government is obliged to support her in this.
 -  Firstly, Muslim girls have talked to teachers about their concern that they might be forced to wear the jilbab and, possibly, at a later stage, the niqab (face covering).
 -  Sadat went as far as to ban the niqab at universities.
 -  No one is discussing the spread of the niqab (face veil) and its symbolism.
 -  The burqa and a smaller type of face mask, the niqab, has been banned by municipal injunction in the cities and towns of Ghent, Antwerp, Sint-Truiden, Lebbeke and Maaseik.
 -  The rights group also claimed that, ‘Islamist students at national universities often harass liberal female classmates for not wearing the niqab, a full veil,’ and that ‘non-Muslims are also victims of this discrimination.’
 -  Many of their womenfolk are clad in traditional head-to-toe black robes, and some wear a niqab, the scarf that covers the face - their appearance contrasting starkly with young local women who favour tight-fitting western clothes.
 -  Lately after the incident of him speaking freely to my brother in laws wives I felt like not wearing my niqab anymore.
 -  A gaggle of people - from older women in full black niqab to young British girls in shorts - are standing in line to get their picture taken with a live snake, one of a collection of 17 of the reptiles on display.
 -  Once accustomed to, the niqab is certainly not inconvenient.
 
    Definition of niqab in US English: niqabnounnəˈkɑbnəˈkäb A veil worn by some Muslim women in public, covering all of the face apart from the eyes.  Example sentencesExamples -  The rights group also claimed that, ‘Islamist students at national universities often harass liberal female classmates for not wearing the niqab, a full veil,’ and that ‘non-Muslims are also victims of this discrimination.’
 -  Once accustomed to, the niqab is certainly not inconvenient.
 -  Firstly, Muslim girls have talked to teachers about their concern that they might be forced to wear the jilbab and, possibly, at a later stage, the niqab (face covering).
 -  The burqa and a smaller type of face mask, the niqab, has been banned by municipal injunction in the cities and towns of Ghent, Antwerp, Sint-Truiden, Lebbeke and Maaseik.
 -  Soon, Azza went further and put on the niqab, the veil that covers a woman's face below the eyes.
 -  The tack taken by the majority of posters supporting her right to have a license while in niqab is that as a profession of her religious faith, the government is obliged to support her in this.
 -  Lately after the incident of him speaking freely to my brother in laws wives I felt like not wearing my niqab anymore.
 -  A gaggle of people - from older women in full black niqab to young British girls in shorts - are standing in line to get their picture taken with a live snake, one of a collection of 17 of the reptiles on display.
 -  The plaintiff holds a sincere religious belief that she should wear the niqab in front of all strangers and unrelated Muslim men.
 -  Sadat went as far as to ban the niqab at universities.
 -  Many of their womenfolk are clad in traditional head-to-toe black robes, and some wear a niqab, the scarf that covers the face - their appearance contrasting starkly with young local women who favour tight-fitting western clothes.
 -  No one is discussing the spread of the niqab (face veil) and its symbolism.
 
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