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Definition of Garment industry
1. Noun. Makers and sellers of fashionable clothing.
Generic synonyms: Industry
Lexicographical Neighbors of Garment Industry
Literary usage of Garment industry
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Garment Trades by Edna Bryner (1916)
"CHAPTER XI EDUCATION FOR THE garment industry From the viewpoint of vocational
education, the most important characteristic of garment manufacturing is that ..."
2. Publication by National Child Labor Committee (U.S.), Cleveland Foundation Survey Committee, Emergency Conservation Committee (U.S.) (1916)
"CHAPTER XI EDUCATION FOR THE garment industry From the viewpoint of vocational
education, the most important characteristic of garment manufacturing is that ..."
3. Industrial Unionism in America by Marion Dutton Savage (1922)
"CHAPTER VII INDUSTRIAL UNIONISM IN THE garment industry i. ... Characteristics of
the garment industry The general characteristics of the garment industry ..."
4. The Chautauquan by Chautauqua Institution (1910)
"The shirtwaist trade viewed as a branch of the vast garment industry strikingly
illustrates the three-fold effect of industry upon womankind; the garment ..."
5. The Garment Trades by Edna Bryner (1916)
"CHAPTER XI EDUCATION FOR THE garment industry From the viewpoint of vocational
education, the most important characteristic of garment manufacturing is that ..."
6. Publication by National Child Labor Committee (U.S.), Cleveland Foundation Survey Committee, Emergency Conservation Committee (U.S.) (1916)
"CHAPTER XI EDUCATION FOR THE garment industry From the viewpoint of vocational
education, the most important characteristic of garment manufacturing is that ..."
7. Industrial Unionism in America by Marion Dutton Savage (1922)
"CHAPTER VII INDUSTRIAL UNIONISM IN THE garment industry i. ... Characteristics of
the garment industry The general characteristics of the garment industry ..."
8. The Chautauquan by Chautauqua Institution (1910)
"The shirtwaist trade viewed as a branch of the vast garment industry strikingly
illustrates the three-fold effect of industry upon womankind; the garment ..."