: goods (such as men's clothing and accessories) sold by a haberdasher
a fine selection of haberdashery
2
: a shop selling notions or men's clothing and accessories
Example Sentences
Recent Examples on the WebThat shop would be Junior’s, which founder Glenn Au launched in 2020 as an online-only, one-man haberdashery that saw clients by appointment or on the road. Eric Twardzik, Robb Report, 23 Aug. 2022 Luhrmann is to filmmaking what Elvis’s cape and white jumpsuit are to haberdashery. Mark Feeney, BostonGlobe.com, 22 June 2022 Heavily influenced by the world of fashion, Joy Moyler infuses her interiors with bespoke elements such as those found in haute couture haberdashery. The Editors Of Elle Decor, ELLE Decor, 1 June 2022 At the novel’s center is the friendship between Susan Warren, the narrator, and Norma-Jean Pavlou, who meet when Susan is hired as an assistant in the Pavlou family haberdashery. Sam Sacks, WSJ, 20 May 2022 In search of a new hat, Tweedy wandered the leather-fragrant aisles at Alcala’s Western Wear, a vaquero haberdashery in Chicago, which has been his home since the nineties. Hannah Seidlitz, The New Yorker, 9 May 2022 Mark Rylance stars as Leonard Burling, a Savile Row expat now operating a haberdashery in 1956 Chicago that caters primarily to the Irish mob. Amy Nicholson, WSJ, 17 Mar. 2022 Thanks to their menswear influences and expert tailoring, many of the moment’s best looks were straight out of the haberdashery. Janelle Okwodu, Vogue, 14 Mar. 2022 So when Claudette gets a job in the haberdashery department at Macys in 1947 or Charley attends a Beatles concert in 1965, the specifics seem paradoxically generic.New York Times, 3 Nov. 2021 See More
Word History
Etymology
Middle English haberdasshrie, from haberdassherehaberdasher + -rie-ry
Note: The word appears earliest in Anglo-French texts, but it is impossible to say, given the obscure origin of haberdasshere, whether the word should be regarded as English or Anglo-French.