English edit

Etymology edit

Related to haberdashery. See -ed.

Adjective edit

haberdashed (comparative more haberdashed, superlative most haberdashed)

  1. Decorated with ribbons, trinkets, etc.
    • 1981, Vicki Goldberg, Photography in print: writings from 1816 to the present, page 135:
      When he showed that petulant old warhorse of an artist, Horace Vernet, haberdashed with medals, Nadar had no trouble revealing a seeker of official honors.
    • 2008 April 20, Paul Devlin, “Black Star”, in New York Times[1]:
      Toward the end of the masterly “Negro With a Hat” (as the Napoleonically haberdashed Garvey was derided by W. E. B. Du Bois), Garvey is quoted as having said: “We were the first Fascists.