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mantillas Meaning in Bengali



নারীর সিল্ক বা লেইস স্কার্ফ

Noun:

স্পেনদেশীয় মেয়েদের অবগুন্ঠনবিশেষ,





mantillas's Usage Examples:

with white mantillas, usually propped up with an ivory comb.


Under normal conditions, other women may wear black dresses with black mantillas.


In Spain, women still wear mantillas during Holy Week (the week leading to Easter), bullfights and weddings.


beautiful young Spanish courtesans in elaborate clothing including lace mantillas – sitting behind the balustrade of a balcony, with two men standing inconspicuously.


his studio he also made shawls for Valais costumes, as well as Spanish mantillas and lace hats for the Sunday best of the peasant women in the Bretagne.


It was used mainly for mantillas and scarves and became part of the archetypical image of a Spanish lady.


chulas are attractive women with black, deep, and passionate eyes wearing mantillas and carrying fans, who are "always gracious", full of conflagration, affection.


The men wore skirts rather than trousers, as well as earrings and mantillas.


Sing a song of mantillas and grated windows and flirtatious eyes and six bulls to die, for Robles.


20 million in shawls, scarves, mufflers, mantillas and similar garments.


In the afternoons, the students with lacy white mantillas on their heads, filled the chapel for common adoration, ending the day.


dressed in mourning clothes with Spanish haircombs or 'peinetas' and 'mantillas'.


During this period in Spain and Latin cultures, women wore lace mantillas, often worn over a high comb, and in Buenos Aires, there developed a fashion.


blankets, 400 pairs of shorts (patees), 200 women's shirts, and 1,200 veils (mantillas) every 80 days.


The Marquise and her two daughters, covered with Spanish mantillas, would take place in their box lined with red velvet .


Sergio Rubin, "Regresó la misa en latín, con mujeres cubiertas por mantillas.


As well as parasols, slippers, baby clothes, curtains, place mats, mantillas, beddings and pillowcases embroidered or crocheted by the extraordinary.


was a Spanish-style restaurant in which the waiters and waitresses wore mantillas and red Iberian costumes.


Some processions are accompanied by women who wear mantillas.


apprenticed to William Kempson, whose business made cuffs, ruffs, tippets, mantillas, boots, shoes, slippers, hosiery and a wealth of other garments and haberdashery.



mantillas's Meaning':

a woman's silk or lace scarf

Synonyms:

scarf;

Antonyms:

disjoin;

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