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calamanco
[kal-uh-mang-koh]
noun
plural
calamancosa glossy woolen fabric checkered or brocaded in the warp so that the pattern shows on one side only, much used in the 18th century.
a garment made from this fabric.
calamanco
/ ˌæəˈæŋəʊ /
noun
a glossy woollen fabric woven with a checked design that shows on one side only
Word History and Origins
Origin of calamanco1
Word History and Origins
Origin of calamanco1
Example Sentences
Another stunning yet simple piece is the “Calamanco Quilt with Border,” from the early 1800s.
But it looks, I suppose, better than it smells——crack, crack——crack, crack——what a fuss thou makest!—as if it concerned the good people to be informed, that a man with pale face and clad in black, had the honour to be driven into Paris at nine o’clock at night, by a postilion in a tawny yellow jerkin, turned up with red calamanco—crack, crack——crack, crack——crack, crack,——I wish thy whip—— ——But ’tis the spirit of thy nation; so crack—crack on.
Calamanco, kal-a-mangk′o, n. a satin-twilled woollen stuff, checkered or brocaded in the warp.
We gave them, however, a good large pack of European goods, to make agreeable presents where they received favours; such as black baize, pieces of say, serge, calamanco, drugget, hats and stockings; not forgetting another pack of hatchets, knives, scissors, beads, toys, and such things, to please the natives of the plain country, if they should meet with any.
I wish you would let Bass get me one pound of pepper and two yards of black calamanco for shoes.
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