Dictionary Definition
fustian
Noun
2 a strong cotton and linen fabric with a slight
nap
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A kind of coarse twilled cotton or cotton and linen stuff
- A class of cloth including corduroy and velveteen
- Pompous, inflated or pretentious writing or speech
Quotations
- 1882, Fustian, of which I have found only one entry before 1401, occurs frequently in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It appears to have been a ribbed cloth. — James Edwin Thorold Rogers, A History of Agriculture and Prices in England, Volume 4, p. 568.
Usage notes
- Used in the sense of "pompous" since at least the time of Shakespeare. For this shift of meaning, compare bombast.
Extensive Definition
Fustian (also called bombast) is a term for a
variety of heavy woven,
mostly cotton fabrics, chiefly
prepared for menswear. It is also used to refer to pompous,
inflated or pretentious writing or speech, from at least the time
of Shakespeare.
History and use
It embraces plain twilled cloth known as jean, and cut fabrics similar to velvet, known as velveteen, moleskin, corduroy etc. The original medieval fustian was a stout but respectable cloth with a cotton weft and a linen warp, possibly derived from El-Fustat, the name of a suburb of Cairo where cloth was manufactured. The term seems to have quickly become less precise, and was applied to a coarse cloth made of wool and flax or wool and linen, and in the reign of Edward III of England, the name was given to a woollen fabric. By the early 20th century, fustians were usually of cotton dyed various colors.In a petition to Parliament
during the reign of Mary
I "fustian of Naples" is
mentioned. In the 13th and 14th centuries priests' robes and women's dresses were made of
fustian, but though dresses are still made from some kinds, the
chief use is for labourers' clothes.
Political significance
Fustian was worn by workers during the 19th century. As such, radical elements of the British working class chose to wear fustian jackets as a symbol of their class allegiance. This was especially marked during the Chartist era. The historian Paul Pickering has called the wearing of fustian "a statement of class without words."Notes
References
- The Online Etymology Dictionary
- Pickering, Paul, A., "Class Without Words: Symbolic Communication in the Chartist Movement", Past and Present, cxii, August 1986, 144-162.
fustian in German: Barchent
fustian in Italian: Fustagno
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
absurdity, amphigory, babble, babblement, balderdash, bibble-babble,
blabber, blather, bombast, bombastic, bombastry, claptrap, double-talk, drivel, drool, fiddle-faddle, fiddledeedee, flatulent, flummery, folderol, fudge, gabble, galimatias, gammon, gassy, gibber, gibberish, gibble-gabble,
gobbledygook,
good-for-nothing, highfalutin, hocus-pocus,
hot air, humbug, inflated, jabber, jargon, meaningless, mouthy, mumbo jumbo, narrishkeit, niaiserie, nonsense, pack of nonsense,
palaver, prate, prattle, purposeless, rant, rigamarole, rigmarole, rodomontade, rubbish, skimble-skamble, stuff
and nonsense, stultiloquence, swollen, trash, trumpery, tumescent, tumid, turgescent, turgid, twaddle, twattle, twiddle-twaddle,
unpurposed, useless, vaporing, waffling, windy, worthless