¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fedoras
1. fedora [n] - See also: fedora
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fedoras
Literary usage of Fedoras
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Read's Salesmanship by Harlan Eugene Read (1915)
"The salesman must say, for instance: First premise—All hat stores should sell
fedoras. Second premise—You own a hat store. Conclusion—Therefore, your store ..."
2. A Guide to the Best Fiction in English by William Winter, George Saintsbury, Ernest Albert Baker (1918)
"It is not the historian of the Stage who has obtruded on public attention the
fedoras, Theodoras, ..."
3. The Wallet of Time: Containing Personal, Biographical, and Critical by William Winter (1913)
"There is no need of hesitation in writing plainly of such a matter. It is not
the historian of the Stage who has obtruded on public attention the fedoras, ..."
4. The Nineteenth Century (1892)
"... I found it hard to persuade people who should have known better that he did
not paint ' fedoras' and ' Ladies in Yellow.' His claims, in fact, ..."
5. The Reminiscences of Augustus Saint-Gaudens by Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1913)
"Top hats there were a plenty in the "Yard," derbies not a few, straws to several
thousands, and of soft "fedoras" just one—his own. ..."
6. A History of the French Revolution by Henry Morse Stephens (1891)
"I civic banquet which was given on the Place do lo the fedoras on July 26.
Many citizens of the Is brought their own suppers to the banquet; and, 1 feast, ..."