Glengarry

[ US /ˌɡɫɛnˈɡɛɹi/ ]
[ UK /ɡlˈɛŋɡæɹi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a Scottish cap with straight sides and a crease along the top from front to back; worn by Highlanders as part of military dress
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How To Use Glengarry In A Sentence

  • That there was some danger in the attempt I knew, but it had been minimized by the philibeg and hose, the Glengarry bonnet and Macleod plaid which I had donned at the instance of Malcolm. A Daughter of Raasay A Tale of the '45
  • For the Glengarry men, who handled only square timber, despised the Murphy gang as sawlog-men; The Man from Glengarry; a tale of the Ottawa
  • The knights of Duart and Sleat, the chiefs of Clanranald and Glengarry, the Lochaber seigniory of Lochiel, and the titled chivalry of Sutherland and Seaforth, [18] formed subjects of poetic eulogy. The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume II. The Songs of Scotland of the past half century
  • Who'd ever think the world of sham real-estate brokers would be so compelling until ‘Glengarry Glen Ross’ came around?
  • The Mothman Prophecies movie download hd glengarry glen ross movie What Writers Can Learn from Superbowl Ads
  • When Baker met the king of Buganda, he appeared in full Highland dress: kilt, sporran and Glengarry bonnet all complete in the heart of Africa. To the Source
  • Pipers wore black shoes, tartan hose, spats, kilt, jacket, full wrap around plaid and glengarry, with hat badge and shoulder brooch, and skeine dhu, permissible.
  • Och, no self-respecting Heelander would be seen oot and aboot withoot a Glengarry bunnet or a kilt.
  • The dominant symbols of Scottish nationalism - the war-pipes, the military tartans, the Glengarry and so on - are a product of that.
  • At first, they tended to be peakless soft round caps or folding blue bonnets, like the Scots glengarry, and by the end of the century most armies had softer and more comfortable caps to wear.
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