dictionary definitions for "attire"


From WordNet (r) 2.0 (August 2003) [wn]:

  attire
      n : clothing of a distinctive style or for a particular
          occasion; "formal attire"; "battle dress" [syn: garb,
          dress]
      v : put on special clothes to appear particularly appealing and
          attractive; "She never dresses up, even when she goes to
          the opera"; "The young girls were all fancied up for the
          party" [syn: dress up, fig out, fig up, deck up,
          gussy up, fancy up, trick up, deck out, {trick
          out}, prink, get up, rig out, tog up, tog out,
          overdress] [ant: dress down]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Attire \At*tire"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Attired; p. pr. & vb.
     n. Attiring.] [OE. atiren to array, dispose, arrange, OF.
     atirier; [`a] (L. ad) + F. tire rank, order, row; of Ger.
     origin: cf. As. tier row, OHG. ziar[imac], G. zier, ornament,
     zieren to adorn. Cf. Tire a headdress.]
     To dress; to array; to adorn; esp., to clothe with elegant or
     splendid garments.
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           Finely attired in a robe of white.       --Shak.
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           With the linen miter shall he be attired. --Lev. xvi.
                                                    4.
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From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Attire \At*tire"\, n.
     1. Dress; clothes; headdress; anything which dresses or
        adorns; esp., ornamental clothing.
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              Earth in her rich attire.             --Milton.
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              I 'll put myself in poor and mean attire. --Shak.
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              Can a maid forget her ornament, or a bride her
              attire?                               --Jer. ii. 32.
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     2. The antlers, or antlers and scalp, of a stag or buck.
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     3. (Bot.) The internal parts of a flower, included within the
        calyx and the corolla. [Obs.] --Johnson.
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