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Từ điển LongMan Dictionary
jacket
jack‧et S2 W3 /ˈdʒækət, ˈdʒækɪt/ noun [COUNTABLE] [date : 1400-1500; Language : French; Origin : jaquet, from jaque 'short coat', probably from jacque 'poor farmer', from the male name Jacques 'James'] 1. a short light coat a leather/denim/linen etc jacket ▪ a suede jacket ⇨ bomber jacket, dinner jacket, life jacket, straitjacket(1)
2. the part of a suit that covers the top part of your body: ▪ Gene has to wear a jacket and tie to work. ▪ tweed jackets ⇨ sports jacket
3. a stiff piece of folded paper that fits over the cover of a book to protect it SYN dust jacket
4. American English a stiff paper cover that protects a record SYN sleeve British English
5. a cover that surrounds and protects some types of machines
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES a baked/jacket potato (=cooked in its skin) ▪ We cooked baked potatoes in the embers of the fire. a cotton shirt/dress/jacket etc ▪ Egyptian cotton sheets are very expensive here. a jacket/trouser/shirt etc pocket ▪ She slipped the map into her jacket pocket. bomber jacket dinner jacket donkey jacket dust jacket flak jacket jacket potato life jacket matinée jacket oilskin coat/jacket/trousers etc smoking jacket sport jacket sports jacket undo your jacket/shirt/bra etc COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ADJECTIVE black ▪ So was her brother, Rory, standing on her far side, in a black leather jacket and black jeans. ▪ However, they did have on black jackets and were bearing guns. ▪ The man who shot Richard had grey hair and was wearing a black leather jacket, a blue jumper and jeans. ▪ I always wear black pants, jacket and top with different black shoes for different trouser styles. ▪ He would wear his black leather jacket at Elinor's funeral. ▪ They never failed to show up with the black jackets and the sneakers and the Pimp Roll. ▪ Jimmy, dressed in jeans and a black leather jacket, had arrived on his motorbike. blue ▪ There was a young Sikh in a red turban, wearing a blue quilted jacket despite the heat. ▪ The fitted blue jacket and the small cap with the red button disappeared. ▪ So had her dark blue jacket, white blouse and black skirt. ▪ He wears navy blue short pants and a little navy blue jacket with bright gold buttons. ▪ One was wearing a blue jacket and the other a grey jacket. ▪ When last seen he was wearing blue jeans, a cream sweatshirt, blue padded jacket and black shoes. ▪ But Paula, dressed in light grey leggings, sweatshirt and a blue denim jacket, looks as cool as a cucumber. brown ▪ Light brown jacket, question mark shirt, without a hat. ▪ Despite the subtropical climate, Mr Jin wore an imitation sharkskin suit and Mr Jiang a nicely cut brown leather jacket. ▪ He was wearing a brown leather jacket, black jeans and was carrying in a blue holdall. ▪ There was no sign of her clothing, a mini-skirt and brown jacket. ▪ He wore a brown sports jacket with a black roll neck sweater. ▪ Frank, who virtually lives in his brown jacket, blends in with his dusty study, and has a Shakespearean flourish. ▪ He was wearing patched jeans and a dark brown jacket tied with string. ▪ He was wearing a brown jacket, green shirt and blue jeans. dark ▪ One carried his dark jacket in an odd kind of bundle under one arm. ▪ A woman in a dark jacket turned and opened a metal door like those on bank vaults. ▪ With a smothered exclamation, she rested her face against the smooth material of his dark suit jacket. ▪ She wore high tops, blue jeans and an oversized dark jacket. ▪ The taller man was wearing a dark, leather jacket. ▪ He was wearing a baseball type cap, dark casual jacket and possibly jeans. ▪ This army tried to outfit all its soldiers. Dark green jacket and trousers, and a hard hat. ▪ He was wearing a red ski balaclava, a dark cotton jacket and tracksuit bottoms. denim ▪ First, he put on his denim jacket. ▪ Against the wall behind them sat two smiling young men in denim jackets. ▪ The men in the denim jackets gaped. ▪ She threw on her denim jacket, and grinning, lied tie door open for Penelope. ▪ Before bringing the receiver to his face, he rubs the earpiece and mouthpiece against the sleeve of his denim jacket. flak ▪ If that happens, Freedman is going to have to get a flak jacket and write another book. ▪ Strapped into an armor-lined cockpit and trussed up in a flak jacket and helmet, Air Force Capt. ▪ McVeigh wore a purple shirt with a flak jacket beneath it and brown slacks. green ▪ She had short dark hair, wore well-cut trousers, a green country jacket and long, mud-splashed boots. ▪ Primo notices his dark swollen belly, pushing out between the flaps of a green flak jacket. ▪ So their green suede jackets with leather collars were quite acceptable. ▪ He has a green jacket hanging in his closet from a visit to Augusta in 1982. ▪ But his determination to collect another green jacket shone through. ▪ A perky lady in a Wimbledon green jacket and carrying a clipboard inspects my credential closely. ▪ There he was, the legendary Krakonosc had arrived with his green jacket flapping in his wake. ▪ Dark green jacket and trousers, and a hard hat. red ▪ He had fair short hair and wore a red tartan jacket. ▪ Every Avis executive was required to don the Avis red jacket and work at the company checkout stations regularly. ▪ He wears a red jacket and trousers and drives a sleigh, just like our Father Christmas. ▪ I finger the red felt jacket from Saint-Malo. ▪ Bathsheba's bedroom window was open, and looking out of it was a handsome man, with his red jacket undone. ▪ I had worn my red tartan plaid jacket, the one I wear only on weekends. ▪ One had on a black top, the other a white top with a red waistcoat style jacket. ▪ He was wearing a red bomber jacket and dark trousers. white ▪ Her white jacket gave no sign of this. ▪ He was wearing a white zip-up jacket, blue denim jeans and training shoes. ▪ The band were dressed in their usual white hats and white jackets. ▪ It makes a good contrast to all those clean white jackets on normal club nights. ▪ On top was a white jacket. ▪ As usual she was stunning, white linen jacket and trousers supremely casual and graceful. ▪ Wills catalog, a cropped white linen jacket sells for just $ 78. NOUN bomber ▪ Wearing jeans and bomber jacket with no make-up, she wasn't trying to be a big deal at all. ▪ In this crossover category are thigh-length parkas that offer more protection on wind-whipped city streets than the old bomber jackets. ▪ He was wearing a black zip-up leather bomber jacket. ▪ He was wearing a black bomber jacket, red T-shirt and faded jeans. ▪ By the look of him he might well have left a genuine World War Two leather bomber jacket in the bedroom. ▪ Co-star Steve McFadden, who plays Phil Mitchell, settled for a bomber jacket with blue jeans. ▪ The man was aged 25-30, wearing a leather bomber jacket. book ▪ One of the subjects on which Headline is careful to listen to the trade is book jackets. ▪ Nature is a kind of poetry for him; an Ecosphere is a book jacket blurb about the real thing. ▪ Blurb a short description or commentary of a book or author on a book jacket. ▪ It peers at you in the background of authors' photographs on book jackets. ▪ Her close friends believe that Mary writes her book reports from book jackets. combat ▪ In the kitchen he put on the combat jacket under his anorak. ▪ My combat jacket, knife, bags, catapult and other equipment I took down to the kitchen with me. ▪ We drove out of the barracks huddled in our combat jackets, and turned north towards the Alps. ▪ He's described as slim, with long black hair, and was wearing a green combat jacket and jeans. dinner ▪ Their known, nearly identical faces, slid by in a wave of tawdry dinner jackets, sequinned old lace. ▪ The city suits and ivory silk dinner jackets she gave to Franky. ▪ Neither Patrick nor John had brought dinner jackets so Sir Bryan decreed that the men would wear lounge suits. ▪ She was surprised that Colonel Scott Wilson wore a dinner jacket. ▪ Some of the casino crowd were here, an assortment of dinner jackets and plunging cocktail dresses. ▪ That relatively small room appeared to be a forest of black dinner jackets, grey hair and cigar smoke. donkey ▪ The man was wearing a donkey jacket and overalls. ▪ The man in the donkey jacket began to walk towards the back door. dust ▪ The firm of Longman claims the first dust jacket, on Heath's Keepsake for 1835. ▪ Just look at the dust jacket. ▪ They were encyclopaedias or dictionaries with the dust jackets removed. ▪ Unless, of course, you include the dust jacket. ▪ The publishers, on the dust jacket, add to this list teachers and students of community health. ▪ A dust jacket, on the other hand, sets up expectations. ▪ Warner in particular is interesting in producing two B formats with dust jackets. ▪ I shall refrain from doing so, though even the dust jacket has chosen to ignore that discretion. leather ▪ She glanced up briefly as David Ryker passed her, his leather jacket undone. ▪ The temperature was more than bearable, and in fact in his leather jacket he was far too warm. ▪ I was more casually dressed in corduroys and a black leather jacket. ▪ He is wearing an old leather jacket, black jeans, midnight blue sweatshirt. ▪ It was when Lizzy was sipping her cider that she realised what the man with the leather jacket was doing. ▪ Primo unzips his bag, removes his leather jacket, reaches into the pocket and takes out his keys. ▪ So was her brother, Rory, standing on her far side, in a black leather jacket and black jeans. ▪ She looked pretty in that short leather jacket she wore with the long colorful silk scarf. life ▪ School was very important, a life jacket in chaos. ▪ I made them wear sneakers, strapped them tightly into a pair of life jackets and turned them loose. ▪ But we were all kitted out in life jackets. ▪ A pair of life jackets and survival suits were stashed beneath the bottom bunk. ▪ This was the only day that Kaz felt life jackets wouldn't be necessary. ▪ Despite my life jacket, I was pinned under water by the down-surging river hydraulic. ▪ Boyant Kapok fibres used to stuff the life jackets had to be removed and teased open again. ▪ The captain of the Iliana ordered his men into life jackets. linen ▪ Carlo is wearing a large, double-breasted linen jacket and non-matching royal blue linen trousers over a slate-grey T-shirt and stone shirt. ▪ In the locker room, she takes off her beige linen jacket and talks strategy. ▪ Both were wearing grey flannel trousers and pale beige or fawn linen jackets. ▪ Wills catalog, a cropped white linen jacket sells for just $ 78. ▪ As usual she was stunning, white linen jacket and trousers supremely casual and graceful. ▪ She sighed as she folded Elise's cream linen jacket over her arm before making her way along the compartment. ▪ He returned this now, putting the bundle of notes in the inside pocket of the creased, off-white linen jacket. pocket ▪ He pulled the small plastic box free and laid it on top of the crate, fumbling in his jacket pocket for something. ▪ Tom folded the letter and stuck it into his jacket pocket. ▪ I put my hand into my jacket pocket, felt for the pack, and pulled one out. ▪ He walked down to the lion house, hands deep in his jacket pockets. ▪ He put his right hand in his jacket pocket and produced a bulky envelope. ▪ From his jacket pocket he took a small vanity mirror and adjusted his hair. ▪ I watched as he put the money in his jacket pocket. potato ▪ Dobson said that 96 % of consumers used low fat cream with salad and 45 % with jacket potatoes. ▪ If you want potatoes with your meal, cook them more often as boiled or jacket potatoes rather than as chips. ▪ Serve with a jacket potato and a green salad. ▪ Cold, cooked jacket potato plus a tub of salad, sandwich filling, or dip. ▪ Open the jacket potatoes lengthways and pile the chilli beans on top. ▪ Two jacket potatoes later - back to it. ▪ The oven door was open, and there were four jacket potatoes on the second shelf. safari ▪ In his Roos-Atkins collapsible hat and safari jacket, he might have stepped from the pages of Field and Stream. suit ▪ His dark hair had been trimmed and lay tidily against the high collar of the grey, swallow-tailed suit jacket. ▪ With a smothered exclamation, she rested her face against the smooth material of his dark suit jacket. ▪ Manion unbuttoned his suit jacket and moved out from the podium area. ▪ Him: suit jacket, £680; striped shirt, £190. ▪ He was ready, right down to the Cal button in his suit jacket. ▪ Then his fingers fumbled to unfasten the small buttons of her suit jacket. ▪ The bishop never took off his suit jacket or removed the glittering cuff links engraved with his episcopal shield. tweed ▪ As a result, the traditional party outfit of flamboyant cravat and tweed jacket has been replaced by the ninety-nine-pound wool suit. ▪ Charles Gullans always wore some sort of tweed jacket and a huge pair of saddle oxfords. ▪ She could still feel, from fingertip to elbow, the textures of cotton shirt, silk tie and tweed jacket. ▪ He wore a tweed jacket over a dark blue turtle-necked jersey and he had a robust mod mustache. ▪ For Diana, a heavy tweed jacket for draughty Balmoral would be a snip at £9.95. ▪ He was still in his riding clothes, well-cut jodhpurs and an old tweed jacket. ▪ The familiar tweed jackets appeared in fresh fruit pastel shades enlivened with a spattering of matched sequins. ▪ She smelt the newness of his clothes, his tweed jacket, the soft shirt, the corduroys. VERB grab ▪ Then I grabbed my jacket and followed him. ▪ Well, Price grabbed me by the jacket, right above the elbow, and asked me what my name was. ▪ Mitti grabbed her jacket and the two of them left. ▪ He fled to the peg and grabbed his jacket and was putting it on when she got up and came toward him. ▪ Pushing himself from the wall he grabbed Tommy's jacket and pulled him along the road. ▪ He grabbed his jacket and briefcase and flung open the car door. ▪ The man who had agreed with Clive grabbed Nina's jacket collar and tried to rip down her back. ▪ I grabbed a jacket, my handbag, and my keys. pick ▪ Ludens hastened to pick up the jacket and helped Marcus into it. ▪ I thought I might pick up a jacket. ▪ He picked up his jacket and went down to the basement. pull ▪ With reluctance she pulled on a jacket and set out for the Rectory. ▪ I tell myself, as I race down the steps, pulling on my jacket. ▪ Because the room was so cold he had pulled on his bomber jacket over his father's shirt. ▪ As he gets up from the table, he pulls on a Stanford-emblazoned jacket he bought on his visit there. ▪ He pulled off his jacket and folded it up beside him. ▪ He pulled on his jacket, smiling. ▪ I pull my battledress jacket over my head in a forlorn attempt to escape from the tiny tormentors; sleep is impossible. ▪ She pulled her leather flying jacket tighter around her. put ▪ He put the jacket around his wife and daughter Eva on the lifeboat. ▪ In the kitchen he put on the combat jacket under his anorak. ▪ I put on my jacket and ran out of the house. ▪ But at any rate I can finally dust my hands and put my jacket on with a clear conscience. ▪ Joe and Rex still wore shorts in the daytime but now they put on warm jackets. ▪ Kalchu put on his jacket and hurried down the path towards the bridge. ▪ They simply told my father to hurry up and put his jacket on. reach ▪ Just as the pause edges towards the ridiculous he reaches into his jacket for this packet of cheroots. ▪ Ezra reached into his jacket and pulled out his cigarettes. ▪ Hitch reached inside his jacket and touched the butt of the Beretta he'd taken from Scott. ▪ Farrell reached inside his jacket, his fingers touching the butt of the.45 in his shoulder holster. ▪ Dowd reached inside his jacket and pulled out a thick brown envelope. remove ▪ He smiled slowly and held her prisoner with his eyes while he removed his jacket with an almost leisurely air. ▪ Primo unzips his bag, removes his leather jacket, reaches into the pocket and takes out his keys. ▪ He removed his jacket, revealing a dashing red woollen waistcoat, rolled up his sleeves and left the room. ▪ He would remove his jacket, roll up his sleeves, and play Ping-Pong with the kids. ▪ In the heat of the kitchen she had removed her costume jacket and hung it over the back of a nearby chair. ▪ He removed his jacket, chuckling to himself. ▪ Pope had already removed his jacket and begun to roll back his sleeve. ▪ Joshua removed his jacket, lay on the bed, turned on the telly but cut the sound. shrug ▪ He shrugged out of his jacket and her hands went to his cotton shirt, fumbling in their haste to undo the buttons. ▪ She shrugged softly; her jacket crackled. ▪ She walked into the flat, and shrugged wearily out of her jacket, hanging it up in the closet. ▪ Accompanied by familiar butterflies, Fabia shrugged into a jacket and left her room. ▪ He shrugs off the jacket of his suit and drapes it over the back of a chair. slip ▪ She slipped the jacket from her shoulders and revealed a slender figure encased in a black woollen suit. ▪ Refolding the map neatly, she slipped it into her jacket pocket. ▪ Scott pulled the car over to the kerb, his right hand slipping inside his jacket. take ▪ Keith took a pull and I took off my jacket and loosened the laces in my shoes. ▪ Pat took off her jacket and hunched forward. ▪ Having taken off their jackets and rolled up their trouser bottoms, the fathers worked barefoot in shirt sleeves. ▪ The bishop never took off his suit jacket or removed the glittering cuff links engraved with his episcopal shield. ▪ Why don't you take off your jacket? ▪ I took off my jacket, laid it on the bed, walked to the bucket, and retched. ▪ By then the officials had taken off their uniform jackets, and were displaying spotless shirts and dark ties. undo ▪ Marcus then undid Patrick's pyjama jacket and started to try to pull it off, then decided not to. wear ▪ It entails a little body contact so do not choose some one who is too uptight and of course they must be wearing a jacket. ▪ Mr Alsop generally wore a velvet smoking jacket to dinner; the young men wore black tie. ▪ Julia, wearing a black leather jacket and faded jeans, hid her face as she scurried through Heathrow. ▪ Frank, the eldest son, is twelve, old enough to wear a jacket and tie. ▪ He was wearing a white zip-up jacket, blue denim jeans and training shoes. ▪ Unlike the other mourners, they were wearing Earnhardt jackets and hats. ▪ The man who shot Richard had grey hair and was wearing a black leather jacket, a blue jumper and jeans. ▪ They were both wearing light-colored leather jackets and bell-bottom pants. PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES safari suit/jacket ▪ Amin was wearing an electric-blue safari suit with matching sombrero. ▪ In his Roos-Atkins collapsible hat and safari jacket, he might have stepped from the pages of Field and Stream. ▪ She wore a safari suit and khaki hat perched on her slipping load of hair. ▪ Tea is brought by a small furtive man in a grey safari suit. ▪ The three cameramen, smiling at the camera for their picture, are wearing identical green safari suits. EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ a jacket and tie ▪ a denim jacket EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ As a result, the traditional party outfit of flamboyant cravat and tweed jacket has been replaced by the ninety-nine-pound wool suit. ▪ Having taken off their jackets and rolled up their trouser bottoms, the fathers worked barefoot in shirt sleeves. ▪ He found himself tending toward a jacket and tie. ▪ I told the bartender it was a jacket, most definitely. ▪ No, at a ceremony at the cenotaph he wore the wrong jacket! ▪ She had short dark hair, wore well-cut trousers, a green country jacket and long, mud-splashed boots. ▪ This will go through a down jacket.
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