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dirndl

noun

  1. traditional dress worn in Germany, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Austria and South Tyrol
L319496 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈdɜːndl̩/ / [ˈdɪəndəɫ] / /ˈdɜɹnd(ə)l/

noun

Etymology: Borrowed from German Dirndl, a diminutive of Dirne (“girl”) (Austria, Bavaria), from Middle High German dierne (“girl; servant”), from Old High German diorna, thiorna (“girl; servant”), from Proto-West Germanic *þewernā (“maiden, young girl; female servant, handmaid”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *tekʷ- (“to flow; to run”).

  1. A traditional Alpine woman's dress having a tight bodice and full skirt.

    For a change, Selina was not in slacks, but in a simple dirndl and sandals.

  2. In full dirndl skirt: a full skirt with a tight waistband resembling one which is part of a traditional Alpine woman's dress.

    On the cover of the leaflet advertising the Alpenrose Gasthof in Zirl am Gurgl […] there is a decorative picture of a young woman. She is wearing Tyrolese costume: the low-cut white bodice with cross-laced velvet waistcoat, the floral apron and dirndl skirt.