Different orders wear different colors, Benedictine nuns wear black, Cistercian nuns were white, and there are others. Regardless of the color, the entire "outfit", if you will, is called a habit, you can see more of an explanation at the link below:
In a word, no! If you choose not to wear formal attire to a "black tie optional event" the expectation is that you will wear a dark suit with a necktie if a guy or a cocktail dress if a woman.
Appropriate attire was required at the gala.
The homophone for attire or clothing is "attire" itself. Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, which is the case here.
An attirer is a person who provides or suggests clothes for another person to wear.
The word attire refers to clothing, formal or dressy in particular.
clothe..or attire
The word 'attire' is quite easy to pronounce one you understand the English alphabet. Just think of the word 'Apple' and and use the same sounding "A" as in apple or "at". That will give you the right "A" sound. Then for the next part of the word 'tire' think of a car Tyre. So we have At-Tyre. Put the whole word together and you have the word 'attire'.
tuxedoes
You ugly snitch
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The word garb refers to a person's clothing or outward appearance, often worn to fulfill a specific role or convey a certain image. It can also refer to a particular style of dress or attire associated with a specific profession or cultural tradition.
The noun 'attire' is an uncountablenoun (mass noun) that has no plural form. The noun 'attire' is a form of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts.