Noun
decided to clothe himself in traditional Scottish garb for the celebration
a fable about personal redemption presented in the garb of a conventional horror story Verb
firefighters garbed in protective gear
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Noun
Customers can come in sweaty gym clothes or date-night garbs.—Jenna Thompson
march 26, Kansas City Star, 26 Mar. 2026 Some of the deportations were captured on video and in images showing men in underwear or prison garb, shackled and bent over at their waists.—Suzanne Gamboa, NBC news, 25 Mar. 2026
Verb
But the visitors from Memphis were a husk of that outfit, a cavalcade of new faces and Golden State castoffs being observed by the ghost of Ja Morant garbed in street clothes.—Joseph Dycus, Mercury News, 10 Feb. 2026 He was garbed in prison attire and did not speak during the brief hearing.—Arkansas Online, 24 Jan. 2026 See All Example Sentences for garb
Word History
Etymology
Noun
borrowed from Middle French & Italian; Middle French garbe "graceful contour, grace," borrowed from Italian garbo "grace, charm, good manners, form, outline of a ship's hull made from wood pieces," of uncertain origin
Note:
If the sense "outline of a ship's hull" is prior to the more abstract senses, the modern Italian word probably continues an earlier etymon represented by (alleged) medieval Genoese dialect garibu in the sense "model of a hull," itself ultimately a loan from Arabic qālib "mold, shoemaker's last" (see caliber); details of attestation are thus far incompletely documented, however. An earlier hypothesis connecting garbo (and the related verb garbare "to be becoming to, please") to Germanic *garwjan- "to prepare, make ready" (presumably via Gothic; see gear entry 1, yare) is questionable on semantic and phonetic grounds.