burnoose
Y
(阿拉伯人和摩爾人穿的) 連帽斗篷
D
–noun
1. a hooded mantle or cloak, as that worn by Arabs.
2. a similar garment worn by women at various periods in Europe and the United States.
Also, burnous.
moviegoers might wonder, "What is it with elder statesmen of cinema sending handsome young men on creepy, addictive quests that lead to wealthy and powerful people with a more than passing interest in black masses and orgies?"
In addition to convincingly re-creating New York City in European studios, both films are based on foreign lit, beautifully made and ultimately rather silly -- there must have been a shortage of burnooses in Europe while both pics were in production.
haberdashery
sartorial
Argyle
cassock
He is a broad-shouldered man with a gentle voice, a well-fitting [cassock] and a hatred so fierce that it is not destroyed until his body is turned into a blazing pillar of fire.
chasuble
In the scenes in church when Fr. Flynn is wearing green [vestments], he wears the [stole] over his [chasuble].
smock
Ed Crane is a man so [nondescript] that neighbors are always forgetting his name and no one seems to recognize him when he's not wearing his [barber's] smock.
negligee
their Adam's apples [bobbing] up and down in excitement as they shoot Page in a black [negligee] in a suburban living room.
babushka
wimple
[Nuns] march past in step, their wimples [bobbing] up and down in unison.
their Adam’s apples [bobbing] up and down in excitement
cloak
but the material remains [cloaked] by the very propriety, stiff manners and emotional [starchiness] the picture delineates in such copious detail.
mantle
The mantle of [darkness] obscured the view.
and the "popular kids" have Oscars on their [mantles]
Smock
2009年1月23日 星期五
Burnoose
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