Sentences with chador
chad·or
C c - Squabbles broke out at one mosque between women dressed in Islamic black chadors, who wanted to have separate queues from men, and women with more open headscarves and long coats.
- The advancing camera discloses that the black mass consists of women in chadors, bobbing in unruly rhythms.
- The physical presence of heavy, life-size garment bags evokes the figures of women concealed in chadors increasingly seen in Amer's native Egypt.
- I'll admit, when I walked into the room and noticed that the first people I saw either had big ‘NO WAR’ buttons on their lapels or were wearing chadors, I felt some trepidation.
- While wrapped in cumbersome chadors and burq'as, women exercise more rights here than in the ultra-conservative states on the other side of the Persian Gulf.
- When they came for the Muslim women in their chadors, I did not speak up because I was not a Muslim woman in a chador.
- For example, under the influence of Islamic fundamentalism, women are required to wear full body coverings, such as chadors and burqas.
- In Iran, only the most devout Muslim women wear a chador, the all-encompassing, usually black, shroud.
- It's dangerous because it makes the veil/burqa / chador a political statement of what the oppressive West is about.
- It's not the full-blown burka or the chador that is at issue, but the simple, elegant headscarf with which Muslim women in France cover their hair, ears and throat.
- Even the most devout Muslim women in Bosnia do not wear the traditional chador worn by women in Arab countries.
- Though it was common for women to wear the hijab, typically a loose overcoat and head scarf, the chador was the mark of women from strict Muslim families.
- The devout Muslim women of Bosnia have not traditionally worn the chador familiar in fundamentalist Muslim countries.
- The chador is a form of loose clothing which covers the body and sometimes the lower part of the face.
- Aisha Dow A Melbourne commuter was kicked off a train after reports he verbally abused a woman dressed in a chador on the Upfield line on Tuesday morning.