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Snood   Listen
noun
Snood  n.  
1.
The fillet which binds the hair of a young unmarried woman, and is emblematic of her maiden character. (Scot.) "And seldom was a snood amid Such wild, luxuriant ringlets hid."
2.
A short line (often of horsehair) connecting a fishing line with the hook; a snell; a leader.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Snood" Quotes from Famous Books



... fairy-light and round that they scarcely seemed to touch the grass where she stood. Her hair, a natural ornament which woman seeks much to improve, was of bright glossy brown, and encumbered rather than adorned with a snood, set thick with marine productions, among which the small clear pearl found in the Solway was conspicuous. Nature had not trusted to a handsome shape and a sylph-like air for young Barbara's influence over the heart of man, but had bestowed a pair of large bright blue eyes, swimming in liquid ...
— Folk-Lore and Legends - Scotland • Anonymous

... starting her arduous war work, and the lack of it altered her amazingly, all the more that she did not wear her short hair "bobbed," in what had become the prevailing fashion, but brushed back from her low forehead, and staidly held in place by a broad, black, snood-like ribbon. ...
— What Timmy Did • Marie Adelaide Belloc Lowndes

... suggests itself that this was oftener the gift of the fair weaver to her favoured lover, to fold round his arm as a scarf in battle or tourney, to be ready in case it was needed for binding up a wound, and had possibly served as a snood to bind her own fair hair. There is an account of a specimen of this kind of weaving by M. Leopold Delisle.[591] He describes the attachment of a seal to a grant from Richard Coeur de Lion to Richard Hommet and Gille his wife, preserved in the archives of the Abbey ...
— Needlework As Art • Marian Alford

... and examined my volunteer guide more attentively. What a prize of a girl! Hair black as night, but with a glossy blackness, was parted on her smooth forehead, and retained behind, after the fashion of the country, by a coloured snood, but two thick Gretchen plaits escaped, and hung down to her waist, making one wish that she had let her whole wealth of tresses wander free. Eyes blue-black, full by turns of soft love and sparkling mischief; Creole complexion, with ...
— Romantic Spain - A Record of Personal Experiences (Vol. II) • John Augustus O'Shea

... she had secured time also to arrange her own person in her best trim. Her finery was very simple. A short russet-coloured jacket, and a petticoat, of scanty longitude, was her whole dress; but these were clean, and neatly arranged. A piece of scarlet embroidered cloth, called the snood, confined her hair, which fell over it in a profusion of rich dark curls. The scarlet plaid, which formed part of her dress, was laid aside, that it might not impede her activity in attending the ...
— Waverley • Sir Walter Scott



Words linked to "Snood" :   meshing, net, meshwork, network, mesh



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