Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A knee-length skirt with deep pleats, usually of a tartan wool, worn as part of the dress for men in the Scottish Highlands.
- noun A similar skirt worn by women, girls, and boys.
- transitive verb To tuck up (something) around the body.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun In the original Highland dress, that part of the belted plaid which hung below the waist; in modern times, a separate garment, a sort of petticoat reaching from the girdle nearly to the knees, composed of tartan and deeply plaited. The garment is imitated in various fabrics for children's wear. See
kilting . - To tuck up; truss Up (the clothes).
- In dressmaking, to lay (a skirt or a flounce) in deep, flat, longitudinal plaits hanging free at the bottom, in the fashion of a Highland kilt.
- noun An obsolete or dialectal preterit and past participle of kill.
- Small; lean; slender.
- To step lightly and nimbly, as if with the skirts kilted out of the way.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- obsolete p. p. from
kill . - noun A kind of short petticoat, reaching from the waist to the knees, worn in the Highlands of Scotland by men, and in the Lowlands by young boys; a filibeg.
- transitive verb Scot. To tuck up; to truss up, as the clothes.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun historical Any Scottish garment from which the above lies in a direct line of descent, such as the philibeg, or the great kilt or belted plaid;
- noun a plaid, pleated school uniform skirt sometimes structured as a wrap around, sometimes pleated throughout the entire circumference;
- noun a variety of non-bifurcated garments made for men and loosely resembling a Scottish kilt, but most often made from different fabrics and not always with tartan plaid designs.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a knee-length pleated tartan skirt worn by men as part of the traditional dress in the Highlands of northern Scotland
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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-- _I'm kilt all over_ means that he is in a worse state than being simply _kilt_.
Tales and Novels — Volume 04 Maria Edgeworth 1808
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Harvey wrote when sending the kilt, I feel so very good that the kilt is where it should be.
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She can be seen, in kilt skirt and bunches, in the kitchen sink classic A Taste of Honey.
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If someone calls his kilt a skirt, he smiles and tells them, "It's only a skirt if I'm wearing pumps with it."
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And I gotta admit, that leather kilt is pretty damn fucking hot.
Skirts ARE unisex, dammit. fantasyecho 2007
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On Saturday, when we went into Newsroom for dinner, I got compliments on the kilt from a few of the women who worked there, but the male staff gave me some "what the fuck" looks.
Pride in a skirt... err... kilt! drewan 2005
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One evening, as myself and my brother, who was then a flaxen headed little fellow, dressed in kilt and tartans, were playing on the grass-plot just described, I saw a strange gentleman enter the postern; and, while we continued at our amusement, we sometimes looked up to remark on him to each other, as he walked to and fro in the pathway beyond the grass: for he appeared very different from the usual order of gentlemen we had seen.
The Scottish Chiefs 1875
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While Stormy Leather’s black leather kilt is wonderful, they didn’t have it in my size, so rather than buy it and wear it a size too big, then have it altered after the event, I decided to forgo such decadent pleasures for tomorrow night’s holiday ball.
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For example, shaving your legs before you wear a kilt is a party foul.
A Year Without Fear Scott Adams 2011
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We don't wear sarongs to class -- though Edwin sometimes wears a kilt, which is pretty smart, given the sand pit.
Notes to Myself Steve Perry 2009
uselessness commented on the word kilt
See also: man-skirt
April 2, 2007
chained_bear commented on the word kilt
And, from the "what a fuckin' idiot" file, comes this gem.
(Not the kid, of course; the principal.)
May 19, 2009