Tippet

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Webster's Dictionary [1]

(1): ( n.) A handful of straw bound together at one end, and used for thatching.

(2): ( n.) A length of twisted hair or gut in a fish line.

(3): ( n.) A cape, or scarflike garment for covering the neck, or the neck and shoulders, - usually made of fur, cloth, or other warm material.

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [2]

(Lat. Liripipium), a narrow garment or covering for the neck and shoulders; a kind of hood worn over the shoulders, which was fastened round the neck by a long pendent appendage called the liripoop. This latter portion was generally dropped during the 16th century, and only the hood was worn. The liripoop lingers in the hat-band, and is used at funerals. The tippet of the almuce had rounded ends, to distinguish it from the squared terminations of the stole; they were worn hanging down in front by canons, but by monks behind, by way of distinction. The tippets disappeared from the hood in the time of Henry VII. The manner of wearing the modern hood or the literate's tippet over the back, depending from the neck by a ribbon, is a corruption, and a practice eminently unmeaning. See Lee, Gloss. of Liturg. Terms, s.v.; Walcott, Sacred Archceol. s.v.

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