chiffon
noun
- sheer, lightweight plain-woven textile of fine, tightly-twisted yarn, of silk or various synthetic fibers
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ʃɪˈfɑn/ / /ˈʃɪfɑn/
noun
Etymology: Borrowed from French chiffon, from Middle French chiffe (“cloth, old rag”), from Old French chipe (“rag”), from Middle English chip, chippe (“chip, shard, fragment”), from Old English ċipp (“chip, splinter, shaving”); see chip.
- A lightweight, balanced plain-woven sheer fabric, or gauze, like gossamer, woven of alternate S- and Z-twist crepe (high-twist) yarns made of silk, polyester, or cotton.
“Her dresses are made from these marvelous chiffons.”
- Any purely ornamental accessory on a woman's dress, such as a bunch of ribbon, lace, etc.