- - coat with sleeves that continue to the collar instead of having armhole seams
- - Jumper of sorts sprinted, covering a good length
- - Overcoat named after a lord
- - Newspaper article about length for such a coat
- - Coat named for a British lord
- - Kind of sleeve named after a British baron
- - Loose overcoat named after a British field marshal
- - Coat named for a Lord
- - Coat named for a general.
- - Coat named after British general.
- - Overcoat named after a British general.
- - Loose coat
- - Coat
- - Type of coat
- - Kind of sleeve that extends to the collar
- - Sleeve that extends to the collar
- - An overcoat found in River Lagan is suspect
- - Baseball T sleeve style
- - Sleeve type
- - Certain sweater
- - Crimean commander to tease, the French note
- - Loose-sleeved garment
- - Lord, sleeve and road made famous by Patrick Kavanagh
- - Type of 12
- - Roomy sleeve
- - Roomy kind of sleeve
- - Style of sleeve
- - Arm-to-collar sleeve
- - Sleeve type seen in sportswear
- - Type of loose overcoat or its sleeve
- - Overcoat sleeve
- - Sleeve style
- - Loose sleeve
- - Topcoat
- - Eponymous Lord
- - Full sleeve
- - Crimean War chief
- - Crimean War commander
- - Set-in sleeve
- - Topcoat type.
- - Type of loose overcoat.
- - Loose overcoat with special sleeves.
- - Type of man's sleeve.
- - Kind of sleeve
- - Type of sleeve.
- - Sweater style
- - Kind of sweater
- - Sweater type
- - Loose overcoat
- - Overcoat
- - Type of overcoat
- - Style of sleeves
- - Sleeve style with slanted seams
- - Loose style of sleeve
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- [ Other definitions ]