ふくをき
Meanings
Expression
Verb (1-dan)
1. to put on clothes; to wear clothes
2. to be the personification of
used prenominally as ~が服を着た(ような)
Composed of
clothes (esp. Western clothes); counter for doses of medicine, gulps of tea, drags of a cigarette, etc.
to wear (in modern Japanese, from the shoulders down); to put on; to bear (guilt, etc.)
Examples (25 in total)
Ken put on his clothes.
I put on my clothes in a hurry.
I was wearing my best clothes.
She is wearing a white dress today.
She was dressed in white at the party.
Most of the soldiers were wearing green.
I wear cool clothes and cool sunglasses.
She always wears clothes which are out of fashion.
She looks odd in those clothes.
She looks pretty in that dress.
The girl dressed in white is his fiancée.
Who is the woman dressed in pink?
Most of the other students wore trendy clothes.
The lady dressed in white is a famous actress.
It is traditional to wear black to a funeral.
Tom helped Mary get dressed.
The room was full of girls in white.
How pretty she looks in her new dress!
"You had better not wear the red dress." "Why not?"
She looks very charming, dressed in white.
Since he was dressed in black, he looked like a priest.
The bus had left by the time my wife finished dressing.
To avoid confusion, the teams wore different colors.
Do you know who that tall blonde girl in green is?
Wear what clothes you please.