TROPICAL LINEN SUITS : WHITE CLOTH TABLECLOTHS.
Tropical Linen Suits
tropical
- Of, typical of, or peculiar to the tropics
- Resembling the tropics, esp. in being very hot and humid
- relating to or situated in or characteristic of the tropics (the region on either side of the equator); "tropical islands"; "tropical fruit"
- of weather or climate; hot and humid as in the tropics; "tropical weather"
- Of or involving a trope; figurative
- characterized by or of the nature of a trope or tropes; changed from its literal sense
linen
- Garments or other household articles such as sheets made, or originally made, of linen
- a fabric woven with fibers from the flax plant
- Cloth woven from flax
- white goods or clothing made with linen cloth
- a high-quality paper made of linen fibers or with a linen finish
suits
- Be convenient for or acceptable to
- Act entirely according to one's own wishes (often used to express the speaker's annoyance)
- (suit) be agreeable or acceptable to; "This suits my needs"
- (suit) a set of garments (usually including a jacket and trousers or skirt) for outerwear all of the same fabric and color; "they buried him in his best suit"
- (suit) lawsuit: a comprehensive term for any proceeding in a court of law whereby an individual seeks a legal remedy; "the family brought suit against the landlord"
- Go well with or enhance the features, figure, or character of (someone)
Tacoma Copacabana Prom 2009
Red, yellow and green lights, zigzagging streamers and paper palm trees transformed The Library at Sanford and Son into the tropical setting for The Prom, a night of dancing and cavorting in the name of charity Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009. It was another successful year for this annual adult fundraising event benefiting CARS, Companion Animal Rescue Society. With “Copacabana” as the theme, partygoers sported all manner of island dress, Cuban linen suits, skimpy showgirl dresses and headpieces of glittery feathers, fruit, and shiny fabric. — Jennifer Johnson, photography by Steve Dunkelberger
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At the Honolulu House in Marshall, Michigan, built in 1860 and the inspiration for the haunted house in Lewis Barnavelt book, The House Where Nobody Lived. It was built by the first U.S. minister to Hawaii, who wanted to recreate the tropical lifestyle in south central Michigan. He died after being caught in a snow storm in his linen suit
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