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Definition of Fedora
1. Noun. A hat made of felt with a creased crown.
Definition of Fedora
1. Noun. A felt hat with a fairly low, creased crown with a brim that can be turned up or down. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fedora
1. a type of hat [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fedora
Literary usage of Fedora
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Guide to the Best Fiction in English by William Winter, George Saintsbury, Ernest Albert Baker (1918)
"fedora." The drama of "fedora," by Victorien Sardou, was written expressly for Mme.
Bernhardt, and, manifestly, it was the purpose of the expert dramatist, ..."
2. Punch by Mark Lemon, Henry Mayhew, Tom Taylor, Shirley Brooks, Francis Cowley Burnand, Owen Seaman (1883)
"fedora is a translatable, but unadaptable play, for fedora adapted would cease to
... Whether fedora had to be transferred to the American, English, Dutch, ..."
3. The Wallet of Time: Containing Personal, Biographical, and Critical by William Winter (1913)
"fedora." The drama of "fedora," by Victorien Sardou, was written expressly for Mme.
Bernhardt, and, manifestly, it was the purpose of the expert dramatist, ..."
4. The Complete Opera Book: The Stories of the Operas, Together with 400 of the by Gustav Kobbé, Katharine Wright (1922)
"fedora Opera in three acts, by Umberto Giordano; text, after the Sardou drama,
... While the beautiful Princess fedora awaits the coming of her betrothed, ..."
5. The American History and Encyclopedia of Music by Janet M. Green, Josephine Thrall (1908)
"fedora " fedora," a lyric drama in three acts with text by V. Sardou, and music
by Umberto Giordano, was first produced in ..."
6. A Dictionary of the Drama: A Guide to the Plays, Play-wrights, Players, and by William Davenport Adams (1904)
"... version of ' fedora ' (1883). In 1887 she played Lucy in a revival of ' The
Hi vals ' at the Opéra Comique. ..."
7. The American Monthly Magazine by Daughters of the American Revolution (1896)
"And as we fight for freedom's cause, Thy watchword ours shall be; A king in heaven
alone we own, His truth makes all men free. fedora I. WILBUR. ..."