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Foulard is believed to have originated in the Far East.
He got out a red foulard handkerchief and made a lot of noise blowing his nose.
I do wish you would have that grey satin foulard of yours done up.
Although his host wore a dark suit and foulard tie, few would ever take him for a civilian.
In modern French, foulard is the usual word for a scarf or neckerchief.
The knot of his foulard tie was held in place by a pearl stick pin.
"The printed foulard has been cheapened by overexposure," he claims.
Instead, a silk foulard square was knotted rakishly at his throat.
The only splash of color was a lavender silk foulard handkerchief in his breast pocket.
He was wearing a tweed sports coat, an open collared shirt, and a foulard.
There was a paisley foulard around his neck.
The winner was Ward Randall, correctly spelling the word foulard.
Mine were sienna suede, paired with a satin foulard blouse.
As accents, he prefers the unexpectedly formal - a white dress shirt or foulard tie.
His tie was a bright red foulard.
Most serious historians are inclined to dismiss the legend of Luciano's foulard nowadays.
She wore a blue foulard with large white spots, and Philip was tickled at the sensation it caused.
I pushed up close to him; my nose was on a level with the diamond stick-pin in his paisley foulard.
Foulard dresses and patent-leather shoes and quite elaborate hats, some of them.
A summer frocl, a sort of foulard silk.
He examined a yellow foulard tie.
Not so the woven foulard.
I loosened my shoes and foulard and poured a glassful of the bourbon.
The word comes from the French word foulard, with the same proper and metonymic meanings.
He wore a perfectly cut suit of dark gray flannel, a neatly pressed white shirt, a foulard tie.