[
UK
/mˈækɪntˌɒʃ/
]
[ US /ˈmækənˌtɑʃ/ ]
[ US /ˈmækənˌtɑʃ/ ]
NOUN
- a waterproof raincoat made of rubberized fabric
- a lightweight waterproof (usually rubberized) fabric
How To Use mackintosh In A Sentence
- I hung on to the back of his kilt as he set off in his stout brogues and little protection against the weather other than a sou'wester and a mackintosh.
- The room would be twelve-and-six a night, and he signed the book, undid his mackintosh, a button for each floor. THE OPEN DOOR
- Ruth deposited her wet mackintosh on the floor and went upstairs, shivering every now and then.
- At the annual Agricultural and Horse Show at Moreton-in-Marsh on Saturday it was advisable to wear gum boots and have a mackintosh handy for the next storm.
- ‘She forgot her mackintosh and got soaked,’ Clarissa said evenly.
- It will bring together almost all of the watercolours and sketches Mackintosh made at the picturesque Mediterranean waterfront of Port Vendres.
- On Twitter, the emergence of @westendproducer, a flamboyant wit with a cynical take on London's theatreland, who likes to hint that he might just be Sir Cameron Mackintosh, is a sparkling example of trick-or-tweet. Darling, is it you? | Editorial
- Morning by morning in a mackintosh and cap, in which he was not seen at other times, he found his way across the bridge to the New Court baths.
- Possessed of her fantasy, Ella went later in the afternoon, when nobody was in that part of the house, opened the closet, unhitched one of the articles, a mackintosh, and put it on, with the waterproof cap belonging to it.
- The winners are as follows: E. Walker; R. Foster; R. Gates; A. Mackintosh.