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Flapper | Girl, Fashion, Style, Dress, Era, & 1920s | Britannica
flapper, young woman known for wearing short dresses and bobbed hair and for embracing freedom from traditional societal constraints . Flappers are predominantly associated with the late 1910s and the '20s in the United States.
www.britannica.com
www.britannica.com
Flapper - Wikipedia
Flappers were a subculture of young Western women prominent after the First World War and through the 1920s who wore short skirts.
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
FLAPPER Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
1. a : something used in flapping or striking b : one that flaps c : flipper sense 1 2. a young woman specifically : a young woman of the period of World War I.
www.merriam-webster.com
www.merriam-webster.com
flapper
▪ I. flapper, n.1 (ˈflæpə(r)) [f. flap v. + -er1.] One who or that which flaps, in senses of the vb. 1. One who flaps or strikes another. Hence (after Swift): A person who arouses the attention or jogs the memory; a remembrancer. Also, of a thing: A reminder.1726 Swift Gulliver iii. ii. 17 [The abse...
Oxford English Dictionary
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What is a Flapper? - Fashion History Museum
A 'flapper' is a young lady who has not yet been promoted to long frocks and the wearing of her hair 'up'.
www.fashionhistorymuseum.com
www.fashionhistorymuseum.com
Flappers in the Roaring Twenties - ThoughtCo
Flappers in the 1920s symbolized women's changing roles, with their daring fashion, love of jazz, and rejection of the norms of earlier ...
www.thoughtco.com
www.thoughtco.com
Flappers - 1920s, Definition & Dress | HISTORY
Flappers of the 1920s were young women known for their energetic freedom, embracing a lifestyle viewed by many at the time as outrageous, immoral or downright ...
www.history.com
www.history.com
Flapper Fashion 1920s Fashion History
A fashionable flapper had short sleek hair, a shorter than average shapeless shift dress, a chest as flat as a board, wore makeup and applied it in public.
fashion-era.com
fashion-era.com
Flapper style | Europeana
'Flapper' became associated with young women who expressed their freedom through an overt appreciation of a new kind of fashionable look.
www.europeana.eu
www.europeana.eu
The Fun of the Flapper - Sartorial Magazine
The flapper marks the first time in modern history that women were truly beginning to be seen as “independent.”
sartorialmagazine.com
sartorialmagazine.com
The Rise of the Flapper | Mental Floss
Mar 22, 2023The 1920 movie The Flapper introduced the term in the United States. The title character, Ginger, was a wayward girl who flouted the rules of society. Played by Olive Thomas, a former Ziegfeld ...
www.mentalfloss.com
Bruce Bliven Interviews a Flapper | The New Republic
Originally published in the September 9, 1925 edition of The New Republic.Jane's a flapper. That is a quaint, old-fashioned term, but I hope you remember its meaning. As you can tell by her ...
newrepublic.com
flapper
flapper/ˈflæpə(r); `flæpɚ/ n1 broad flat device used for killing flies, etc (打苍蝇等的)拍子; 蝇拍.2 (dated infml 旧, 口) fashionable and unconventional young woman of the 1920s (20世纪20年代的)不拘传统的时髦少女.
牛津英汉双解词典
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The Flapper
The Flapper is a 1920 American silent comedy film starring Olive Thomas. Olive Thomas appeared in only two films after The Flapper. She died in Paris in September 1920.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Flapper pie
Flapper pie is a vanilla custard pie topped with meringue (or sometimes whipped cream in Southern Saskatchewan). The Graham cracker cream pie dates back to the 19th century but entered Western Canadian pop culture in the 20th century as flapper pie.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org