witch's hat
English

An orange traffic cone
Etymology
From their conical shape, resembling the hats that witches are popularly believed to have worn.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
witch's hat (plural witches' hats)
- Hygrocybe conica, a small mushroom of the waxcap genus found in North America and Northern Europe.
- (Australia) A traffic cone.
- Alternative form of witch hat
- 1995, Andrew Geeson, Noddy Annual, Egmont Books, →ISBN, page 51:
- Tessie had a witch's hat and that made Noddy laugh. "You'll never look bad enough to be a witch!" he said.
- 2010, Jennifer Weiner, Fly Away Home, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, page 332:
- "Right here," said Lizzie, who had a witch's hat perched on her head. Underneath it she wore a loose black sweater, a long, tattered black skirt, black patterned hose, and ankle-high black boots.
- 2017, Cynthia Staton, Life Lived Not Lost: A Journey of Hope, Morgan James Publishing, →ISBN, page 69:
- Immediately Victoria took off her headband that had a witch's hat on it and gave it to the girl. “Now you are a proper witch,” she said. The girl smiled and went out trunk or treating.
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- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see witch, hat.
- We had finally found the witch, who was wearing a green top hat that seemed a bit out of place. As she looked up towards us, the wind blew the witch's hat off of the witch's head.
Synonyms
- (mushroom): conical wax cap, conical slimy cap
Translations
fungus
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Anagrams
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