Antonyms for fustians
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : fuhs-chuhn |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈfʌs tʃən |
Definition of fustians
Origin :- "thick cotton cloth," c.1200, from Old French fustaigne, from Medieval Latin fustaneum, probably from Latin fustis "staff, stick of wood," probably a loan-translation of Greek xylina lina "linens of wood" (i.e. "cotton"), but the Medieval Latin word also is sometimes said to be from Fostat, town near Cairo where this cloth was manufactured. [Klein finds this derivation untenable.] Figurative sense of "pompous, inflated language" recorded by 1590s.
- As in jargon : noun specialized language; dialect
- As in rant : noun yelling, raving
- As in rhetoric : noun wordiness; long speech
- As in euphuism : noun inflation
- As in flatulence : noun pomposity
- As in balderdash : noun nonsense
- As in bombast : noun boasting
- As in grandiloquence : noun bombast
- As in orotundity : noun bombast
- As in turgidity : noun bombast
- In the fifteenth century Naples was famous for the weaving of fustians.
- Extract from : « Textiles and Clothing » by Kate Heintz Watson
- A reference to Norwich fustians of as early a date as the 14th century is quoted by Baines.
- Extract from : « Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 7, Slice 5 » by Various
- It was the principal market for the fustians which were manufactured at Bolton, Leigh and the places adjacent.
- Extract from : « The Great Civil War in Lancashire (1642-1651) » by Ernest Broxap
- Item iij large cofres for the wardrobe for bedds, shetis and fustians.
- Extract from : « Mary Tudor, Queen of France » by Mary Croom Brown
- Fustians shall always be shorn with the long shear, so that it can be worn for at least two years.
- Extract from : « Our Legal Heritage, 5th Ed. » by S. A. Reilly
- Humphrey Chetham, the founder of this institution, was a dealer in fustians in Manchester early in the seventeenth century.
- Extract from : « The Rivers of Great Britain; Rivers of the South and West Coasts » by Various
- The next process to which fustians are exposed is steeping in hot water, to take out the dressing paste.
- Extract from : « A Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures and Mines » by Andrew Ure
- Item iiij pair of fyne shets and ij pair of fustians for the said trussing bedde.
- Extract from : « Mary Tudor, Queen of France » by Mary Croom Brown
- Philip and Mary passed an act to encourage the making “of russels, satins, satins-reverses, and fustians of Naples.”
- Extract from : « A Comprehensive History of Norwich » by A. D. Bayne
- They also brought cotton wool from Smyrna to work into fustians and dimities.
- Extract from : « Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 17, Slice 5 » by Various
Synonyms for fustians
- abracadabra
- address
- altiloquence
- argot
- babble
- balderdash
- banality
- big talk
- bluster
- boastful
- boasting
- bombast
- bombastry
- bosh
- braggadocio
- bull
- bunk
- buzzwords
- cant
- claptrap
- cliché
- colloquialism
- commonplace term
- composition
- cotton
- crock
- delicacy
- diatribe
- discourse
- doublespeak
- drivel
- elocution
- eloquence
- empty talk
- exaggeration
- floridness
- flowery language
- flummery
- fudge
- fustian
- gasconade
- gibberish
- Gongorism
- grandiloquence
- grandiosity
- hackneyed term
- harangue
- histrionics
- hot air
- hyperbole
- idiom
- idle words
- insipidity
- jargon
- lexicon
- lingo
- magniloquence
- malarkey
- moonshine
- mumbo jumbo
- neologism
- newspeak
- nonsense
- oration
- oratory
- orotundity
- overused term
- pad
- padded
- palaver
- parlance
- patois
- patter
- philippic
- pomposity
- poppycock
- purism
- rage
- rant
- rave
- rhapsody
- rhetoric
- rigmarole
- rodomontade
- rot
- shoptalk
- slang
- slanguage
- speech
- stale language
- street talk
- stuff
- stuffed
- tirade
- tongue
- trash
- tripe
- trite language
- tumidity
- turgidity
- twaddle
- tympany
- usage
- verbosity
- vernacular
- vocabulary
- vociferation
- windiness
- wordiness
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019