widow's weeds
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: * Widow's weeds: A black garment, typically a dress or ensemble of clothing, worn by a widow as a sign of mourning. The term specifically denotes the traditional, somber attire associated with bereavement.
Usage Examples
- Noun:
- In Victorian times, a woman was expected to wear widow's weeds for at least two years after her husband's death.
- The painting depicted a somber figure in full widow's weeds, standing alone by the graveside.
- The custom of wearing widow's weeds has become much less common in modern society.
Advanced Usage
- The phrase is often used historically or in literary contexts to evoke a specific image of formal, prolonged mourning.
- While "weeds" here refers to garments, it is an archaic usage unrelated to the common word for unwanted plants. It originates from the Old English (garment).
Variants and Related Words
- Weeds (archaic, plural noun): Garments or clothing, especially of a specified kind (e.g., ). In modern English, this sense is only preserved in the fixed phrase "widow's weeds."
- Mourning clothes/attire (noun phrase): A more general, modern term for clothing worn to express bereavement.
Synonyms
- Mourning dress
- Black (in the context of mourning attire, e.g., "She was dressed in black.")
- Funeral attire
Related Idioms
- In mourning: The state of grieving, often signaled by wearing dark or black clothing.
- After the loss, the entire family was in mourning for several months.
- Wear black: To dress in black clothing, often for a funeral or as a sign of mourning.
- It is customary to wear black to the funeral service.
Noun
- a black garment (dress) worn by a widow as a sign of mourning