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Examples

  • Her grandmother had seen to everything else, and was devoted to a durable material known as longcloth, which one buys by the bolt and uses forever.

    The Wishing-Ring Man Margaret Widdemer 1931

  • And they fell to bringing him longcloth and saying to him,

    The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night 2006

  • I was buying the longcloth; and — in that glass — I saw one of the shopmen point to my shoulder and whisper to another.

    The Moonstone 2003

  • A pile of stinking sheep-skins, a few rolls of questionable longcloth, two packets of candles, some sheep-shears, gin-traps, and a keg of tar.

    On the Heels of De Wet Lionel James 1913

  • But the English shirt-maker proceeds upon different lines; he always seems afraid of wasting a few inches of longcloth, and thus if the ordinary ready-made shirt on sale at shops of the average class is dressy-looking enough, it is also often supremely uncomfortable to those who like their ease.

    With Zola in England Vizetelly, Ernest A 1899

  • "Here," said the shopwoman, "is the gown, longcloth, one-and-sixpence; here is the flannel, one-and-sixpence; and here is the little shirt, sixpence."

    Esther Waters 1892

  • They took out the flannel, and the longcloth and things, and the roll of embroidery that I was going to trim them with, and rolled inside that, if you'll believe me, there was the necklace like a shining snake coiled up.

    In Homespun 1891

  • 'An honest hosier and draper, serge and longcloth warehouseman' -- he groaned from rib to rib -- 'at the sign of the Gartered Kitten in the loyal town of Dulverton.

    Lorna Doone; a Romance of Exmoor 1862

  • There was a glass in front of me, at the counter where I was buying the longcloth; and -- in that glass -- I saw one of the shopmen point to my shoulder and whisper to another.

    The Moonstone Wilkie Collins 1856

  • Gaudy shawls cover white cotton jackets; and skirts of bright, showy longcloth suggest the parrot or the cockatoo.

    To the Gold Coast for Gold A Personal Narrative in Two Volumes.—Volume I Richard Francis Burton 1855

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