hijabi
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /hɪˈd͡ʒɑːbi/
- Rhymes: -ɑːbi
Noun
hijabi (plural hijabis)
- A person, usually a woman, who wears a hijab.
- 2008, Saba Alvi, An Analysis of how Hijabi Youth Experience Social Activities in Ottawa Secondary Schools, →ISBN:
- The findings and implications of this study have been categorized into themes in order to illustrate the essence of how hijabi youth experience social activities in Ottawa secondary schools.
- 2011, Farheen Khan, From Behind the Veil: A Hijabi's Journey to Happiness, →ISBN:
- 2014, Nitin Agarwal, Online Collective Action, →ISBN, page 219:
- […] state that their motivation for blogging is to promote Islamic-appropriate dress, modest fashion options, and pride in the American hijabi identity. They blog to share ideas about designing couture that is both fashionable and modest, […]
- 2014, Shabana Mir, Muslim American Women on Campus: Undergraduate Social Life, →ISBN:
- Almost all hijabis I encountered—except Intisar, Elizabeth, Sharmila, and Muna—were chic hijabis typically garbed in attractive, elegant, yet modest ensembles.
Translations
person who wears a hijab
Noun
hijabi (plural hijabis)
- (chiefly in a West African context) Alternative form of hijab.
- 1999, Civil Society and the Political Imagination in Africa, →ISBN, page 239:
- Unlike sheer veils that hug shoulders suggestively and espouse their wearer's movements gracefully, the stiff brocade of the hijabi hides a woman's upper torso so completely as to render impossible the definition of her body contours.
- 2009, Adeline Masquelier, Women and Islamic Revival in a West African Town, →ISBN, page 228:
- As an example of the way dress functions as “public display” (LeBlanc 2000:448), the hijabi is worn when going out— whether on top of one's “good clothes” or over one's everyday faded clothes. One would not wear a hijabi to attend a […]
- 2013, African Dress: Fashion, Agency, Performance, →ISBN, page 97:
- […] if I waited for it to dry I would be wasting my time. So I asked if there was anyone in the house who had a hijabi. There was not one, except a […]
Hausa
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.