51Թ

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View synonyms for

yukata

[ yoo-kah-tah ]

noun

plural yukata.
  1. a Japanese dressing gown or lounging robe of soft, lightweight cotton.


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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of yukata1

1815–25; < Japanese: literally, a bathrobe, shortened form of yu-katabira, equivalent to yu hot water + kata side + -bira, combining form of hira (earlier fira, *pira ) flat thing
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

She has a clear preference for the casual Yukata, made of unlined, summer-weight fabric with shorter sleeves, despite the urging of her sensei to up her game.

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After the war, the Takekawa family, including Beth’s father, Yukata “Dutch” Takekawa, resettled in Minneapolis, one of the few U.S. cities allowing resettlement for Japanese Americans.

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Noted for her bold, unisex prints for both kimono and yukata, a lighter kimono, and her refusal to accept conventional limits on wearing them, Takahashi this year was part of an exhibit at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum.

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She also has a contract to provide yukata for a new, luxury hotel as Japan gears up to host the Olympics.

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She persisted until she was selling 100 to 200 made-to-order yukata a month - remarkable success in an industry so steadily declining that sales now hover around 16 percent of what they were in 1981, according to government data.

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