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English
Noun
bathing-cap (plural bathing-caps)
- Dated form of bathing cap.
1777 January 9, The Public Advertiser, page , column 2:Oiled Silk and Linen Great Coats, Cloaks, Hoods, Capuchins, Riding Aprons, Bathing-caps and Hat-caſes; […]
1785 November 17, Drewry’s Derby Mercury, volume LIV, number 2794, front page, column 4:Alſo various Kinds of Perfumery, Oil’d Silk and Linen Bathing-Caps, Ladies Hoods and Hat-Covers, Gentlemens’ Hat-Covers and Caſes, and Riding Aprons, on reaſonable Terms.
1788 May 1, The Caledonian Mercury, number 10,398, Edinburgh, front page, column 1:Beſt Oiled Lawn Bathing-Caps at 1 s. 8 d. each.—Beſt Oiled Silk Bathing-Caps at 2 s. 6 d. each.
1789 October 15, The Bath Chronicle, volume XXVIII, number 1463, Bath: R. Cruttwell, , front page, column 1:The dog drew him to ſhore by ſeizing hold of his bathing-cap.
1934, P L Travers, “East Wind”, in Mary Poppins (Mary Poppins; 1), London: Gerald Howe Ltd , →OCLC, page 13:From the carpet-bag she took out seven flannel nightgowns, four cotton ones, a pair of boots, a set of dominoes, two bathing-caps and a postcard album.
1992 January 11, Ann Rosenberg, “Weighing Christianity”, in The Weekend Sun, volume 106, number 204, page D11, columns 1–2:I believe the artist counts on us to chuckle at the fact that in contrast to Michelangelo’s Christ-like titans who were sometimes constrained by classical bindings around their chests, his aerobicized new-age Christ figures suffer the indignity of too-tight bathing-caps.
1992 September 20, “Forever in style”, in Fashion (The Independent on Sunday), page 30, column 1:It’s hard to pick a winner, but I have to go for the rubber bathing-cap she wore to kiss Richard Burton.
1994, Audrey Borenstein, “Evanescence”, in Arkansas Review: A Journal of Delta Studies, volume 26, numbers 1–4, page 384:Morrison, the leader of their inner circle of campus radicals, in the yellow winding-sheet, his freckled face covered with pancake make-up, his red hair stuffed into a yellow bathing-cap, announcing he would immolate himself at dawn.
1994 July 29, John Walsh, “Sorting the men from the bayous”, in Independent London, page 6, column 5:Just one slab of it could have doubled as a rubber bathing-cap.
1995 December 16, John Walsh, “John Walsh: a stranger in the Palace”, in Independent Magazine, page 45, column 3:After midnight, the costumes got wilder. A full-fig Pharaoh chatted to a mad person in a baldie bathing-cap and Mr Spock ears.
2008 January 3, Dominic Cavendish, “This right-on bird is just quackers”, in The Daily Telegraph, number 47,457, page 31, column 4:Arm-bands, bathing-caps, tutus and wellies supply just enough aquatic detail for the imagination to take flight.
2012 November 4, Kourtney Roy, “[Pictures perfect: What makes a portrait of a woman unforgettable? We asked eight leading female photographers to identify their favourite] ‘Penthouse Pool’, 1961, by Slim Aarons”, in stella (The Sunday Telegraph), page 57:It was the colours that struck me when I first saw this: reds and pale yellows reflecting each other throughout the image, from the flowers in the woman’s bathing-cap to her red, red lips to the cushions that take us around to the dishes on the table, all perfectly set off by cool, pale blue.