<span class="searchmatch">commoner's</span> <span class="searchmatch">gown</span> (plural <span class="searchmatch">commoner's</span> <span class="searchmatch">gowns</span>) (Oxford University) A <span class="searchmatch">gown</span> worn as part of subfusc by any undergraduate who has not been awarded a scholar's...
<span class="searchmatch">commoner's</span> <span class="searchmatch">gowns</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">commoner's</span> <span class="searchmatch">gown</span>...
gown cap and gown carriage gown <span class="searchmatch">commoner's</span> <span class="searchmatch">gown</span> disgown dressing <span class="searchmatch">gown</span> dressing-<span class="searchmatch">gown</span> evening <span class="searchmatch">gown</span> fire-<span class="searchmatch">gown</span> Geneva <span class="searchmatch">gown</span> gownie gownless gownlet gownlike...
→OCLC, page 12: No one feeds at the high table except the dons and the gentlemen-<span class="searchmatch">commoners</span>, who are undergraduates in velvet caps and silk <span class="searchmatch">gowns</span>[.]...
Kirkfield Heiress, page 18: They were all garbed in the usual one-piece <span class="searchmatch">gown</span> to the calf, but where most lowlings wore drab, usually so filthy what color...
Shenstone: although he kept his name in the college books, and changed his <span class="searchmatch">commoner</span> <span class="searchmatch">gown</span> to that of a civilian, yet he had now, I believe, no thoughts of proceeding...
《出師表》 Chén běn bùyī, gōnggēng yú Nányáng. [Pinyin] I was originally a <span class="searchmatch">commoner</span> who farmed in Nanyang himself. (ordinary people): edit 一般人 (yībānrén) 世人...
white clothes; white robe, dress or coat (historical) fameless person; <span class="searchmatch">commoner</span> (historical) servant (Buddhism) layperson (a non-monastic Buddhist)...
high table except the dons and the gentlemen-<span class="searchmatch">commoners</span>, who are undergraduates in velvet caps and silk <span class="searchmatch">gowns</span>[.] 1876, George Eliot [pseudonym; Mary Ann...
made her figure very like a boy's kite; and I might have pronounced her <span class="searchmatch">gown</span> a little too decidedly-orange, and her gloves a little too intensely green...