释义 |
trilby /ˈtrɪlbi /noun (plural trilbies) chiefly BritishA soft felt hat with a narrow brim and indented crown.He then set up the flip chart in the corner of the room, and took a tweed trilby from the hat stand and arranged it jauntily on his head....- Very few of them, no matter how poor, are bareheaded: the men wear flat caps, bowlers, straw boaters, trilbies, toppers, the women shawls or floral hats.
- The man on the doorstep had a camera dangling round his neck and was wearing a soft trilby hat - the kind that George Raft used to wear.
Derivatives trilbied adjective ...- Barry McGovern and Garrett Keogh as the trilbied chorus are suitably grave observers finally concluding that ‘wise conduct is the key to happiness’.
- I pointed out a cluster of trilbied men in greatcoats lurking by the salad shelves.
- So, just having got some cash from a high-street sidewalk hole-in-the-wall, I accosted the next customer, a man of about 40, trilbied and rain-coated.
Origin Late 19th century: from the name of the heroine in G. du Maurier's novel Trilby (1894), in the stage version of which such a hat was worn. Trilby was the heroine of George du Maurier's novel Trilby, published in 1894. In the stage version the Trilby character wore a soft felt hat with a narrow brim and indented crown, which was immediately dubbed a trilby. Trilby falls under the influence of a musician called Svengali, who trains her voice by hypnotizing her and makes her into a famous singer, although she had been tone-deaf before meeting him. A person who exercises a controlling or mesmeric influence on another is consequently sometimes called a Svengali.
Rhymes astilbe, Philby |