Only with the priests permission :)
wimpled means wearing a wimple or in Scotch dialect, wrinkled. ( A wimple is head covering worn by some nuns. )
A wimple is a medieval type of collar that is still worn by some present-day nuns. These sisters live in convents.
A wimple is a cloth which covers the head and is worn around the neck and chin, worn by nuns in certain orders.
The white cloth that covers the head of a nun and which is tied tightly under the chin..
The anagram is "wimple" which was a headcloth, one form of which is still worn by some nuns today.
Wimple piranha was created in 1819.
Traditionally, and many contemporary convents of Carmelites wear a brown habit with a white wimple and black veil. They wear a cape over the entire thing when they are in choir, although there are some "modern" nuns who have modified their habits, or done away with them altogether. For the most part, the nuns with no habits are dying out, and the only orders that are surviving and growing are wearing habits.
The nun wore a wimple.
wimple
A wimple is part of the head covering in a Catholic nun's habit.
Nuns wore the same undergarment as all other women - a full-length linen shift or chemise with a round neck, long sleeves and a hem reaching the ankles. This was the only underwear.Covering the hair, sides of the face and chin was the linen bindae or wimple; the hair was cut extremely short beneath.The habit was just the same as that worn by monks and the colour indicated the Order: black wool for Benedicines and natural off-white wool for Cistercians. Over this a scapular of the same material was worn for manual work, to keep the habit clean.Over the wimple a white wool veil was worn by novices, Benedictine nuns changing to a black veil when they took their final vows.Shoes were worn on the feet and a simple belt might be tied around the habit, under the scapular. Cloaks and fur-lined garments would be added in the depths of winter.See links below for images:
dimple