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Definition of Capuccio
1. n. A capoch or hood.
Definition of Capuccio
1. (Spenser) a hood [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Capuccio
Literary usage of Capuccio
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Transactions by European Orthodontic Society, Lina Oswald, Northern Ohio Dental Society, Ossory Archaeological Society, Wentworth Historical Society, Society of Automobile Engineers (1902)
"21, 1893 capuccio, MARIO, Raimondo & capuccio, Consulting Engineers and Patent
Agents, Piazza Castel.o 22. Turin. Italy. Dec. 20, 1893 CARLEBACH. ..."
2. A Glossary of Tudor and Stuart Words: Especially from the Dramatists by Walter William Skeat, Anthony Lawson Mayhew (1914)
"Ital. capuccio, a cowl. carabin e, carbine, a mounted musketeer. Beaumont and
Fl., Wit without Money, v. 1 (Merchant). F. carabin, 'cavalier qui porte une ..."
3. A New General Biographical Dictionary by Hugh James Rose (1857)
"... such as he thought that saint had, or would have worn during life; having on
his head a large sort of hood, ending in a sharp corner, called capuccio, ..."
4. Classical English Reader: Selections from Standard Authors. With Explanatory by Henry Norman Hudson (1877)
"... and in her hand did hold 9 That is, according to the fashion of the people of
Albania. capuccio is capuchin, or capuche ; the hood of a ..."