'Pink shirts are commonplace in London; so are striped shirts. Such an approach in formal Paris could easily derail an otherwise promising career.'
The biggest difference between French and English men when it comes to business attire is how clothes fit. Choosing what to wear every day for school, albeit under the supervision of parents, makes the French more aware of…
From the Fringe | 04.08.2008
Women's History Is Writ Large in Bavarian Town
Big girls don’t cry, and they don’t dress up as club-wielding, 17th century warriors rabidly defending their city walls, either. But in the Bavarian town of Kronach, Germany, one of those statements is decidedly untrue.
pin-stripe(s)
n. - 細條紋, 細條紋的布料
日本語 (Japanese)
n. - ごく細い縦縞, ピンストライプ, ごく細い縦縞の服
細縞(じま)(の布); その柄の洋服.
pin-striped a.⇒
pin
由於 "pinstripes"(
細條紋的西服布料)多為職場穿著, 所以"Q&A: Wikipedia in Pinstripes"探討Wikipedia 製作方式是否能為公司所應用
中文:
縞:白色的絲織品
日文
しま 縞
stripes.
・~の striped.
・~のシャツ a striped shirt.
・縦[横]~ vertical [horizontal] stripes.
縞模様 a striped pattern.
縞模様横断歩道 〔英〕a zebra crossing.
NOUN
1A long, narrow band or strip differing in colour or texture from the surface on either side of it:a pair of blue shorts with pink stripes
1.1archaic A blow with a scourge or lash.
2A chevron sewn on to a uniform to denote military rank:he was wearing his old uniform without its sergeant’s stripes
3chiefly
North American A type or category:entrepreneurs of all stripes are joining in the offensive
VERB
[WITH OBJECT]
Mark with stripes:her body was striped with bands of sunlight
Phrases
earn one's stripes
Gain a higher rank in the military.
1.1Deserve a position, status or reputation through work or achievements:she’s earning her stripes by showing how hard she’s willing to work
Origin
Late Middle English: perhaps a back-formation from
striped, of Dutch or Low German origin; compare with Middle Dutch and Middle Low German
strīpe.
ADJECTIVE
Marked with or having stripes:[IN COMBINATION]: a green-striped coat
Companies interested in tapping into the shared expertise of their workers—the wisdom of crowds
writ for business—are looking towards models such as Wikipedia that encourage collaboration.
NOUN
2archaic A piece or body of writing.
Origin
Old English, as a general term denoting written matter, from the
Germanic base of
write.
be writ large FORMAL
to be very obvious:
Her distress was writ large in her face.
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