hat - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • wear: Good job I'm wearing the cricket hat else I'd be fried.
  • brim: His face was cast into shadow by a wide brimmed hat, also brown.
  • don: The 29 residents and visitors donned union flag hats and enjoyed a party at the housing scheme in Barley Croft.
  • knit: Knit clothes for your children, yourself, friends and family, or knit hats for cancer patients and clothes for premature babies.

Adjective modifier

  • wooly: Clive becomes first of 4 people to lose their wooly hats.
  • straw: Beneath his straw hat the hard grooves of his face told of years under the sun.
  • wide-brimmed: Wear wide-brimmed hats with at least a 3 " brim or a legionnaires hat with a flap in the back.
  • silly: And I would not like to spend a weekend with drunk idiots in silly hats.
  • broad-brimmed: There is the red shirt and long black beard of Olivier, which blows as he stands, his broad-brimmed hat in his hand.
  • floppy: A floppy, cotton hat can be an appreciated item on a hot, sunny day.

Modifies a noun

  • trick: Keeping up the hat trick theme they will all have new releases out on 28th August.

Noun used with modifier

  • bowler: The stout man has thrown his hard bowler hat fully on his face.
  • cowboy: The girls turned out in fine form wearing all sorts of fancy dress from big pants to cowboy hats.
  • beanie: He also had a blue beanie hat pulled down and the collar of his jacket was pulled up.
  • bobble: Mind you, I'd tip my wooly bobble hat to anyone who can cope with the Karrimor.
  • trilby: I was then discharged at Oulton Broad with a pin stripe suit and a green pork pie trilby hat.
  • panama: I saw him in the sunlight wearing a white suit and a panama hat.

Possessives

  • jester: Lots of children dressed-up, and most adults sporting at least a jester's hat with bells.

Preposition: with

  • brim: Polar fleece headband, wool hat, or balaclava for the night, and sun hat with brim for the day.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.