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One was a man, wearing a proper European suit and a bright red tarboosh.
He was a splendid handsome fellow in a white robe with a red tarboosh on his head, and I went up to him.
He achieves a near monopoly manufacturing the tarboosh, or fez.
The origins of the fez, which Moroccans call the tarboosh, is disputed.
Until the 19th century it was the only source of Fez hats (also known as the tarboosh).
He wore a dinner jacket with a large diamond in his shirt-front and the tarboosh of his country.
Beneath the richly decorated Ghuri complex sits the bazaar's last tarboosh maker.
Moreover a muntaz wore a star and a gallon on his tarboosh, with the base parallel to the lower edge of the hat itself.
There was one of a Negro wearing a tarboosh with his mouth wide open as if he were shouting at someone to the right of the camera.
The new Egypt discards tarboosh and Baktrakanis, though they move and prosper elsewhere.
Just before he was due Athelny routed out an Egyptian tarboosh and insisted on putting it on.
Under this cap are placed one, often two, felt caps ('lubbadah'); and the national head-dress of the Turkey, the red 'tarboosh'.
In the front seat, Rabbi Kadouri floated inside his robes, almost evanescent beneath his tarboosh hat.
Even when wearing his tarboosh he was only five feet four inches tall, and his borrowed clothes hung awk- wardly.
The workmen dropped their bundles and gaped; the crowd murmured and swayed, watching expectantly; and the man in the tarboosh turned to face me.
The dress has changed little - hooded djellaba cloaks, red tarboosh hat (the fez) and open-heeled babouche slippers.
A political reading cannot be simply dismissed though since Beckett himself "briefly entertained making each character wear a tarboosh, fezlike headgear associated with Armenians."
Playing up her dusky skin, the socialite "would wear a tarboosh, or pillbox monkey hats, and pinned bunches of jeweled grapes to her bathing suit."
And I wear on my head the skin and feathers of the fowl because my tarboosh was stolen by the sea whenas it flung me rudely upon this strand.
Then he pushed his way in among the crowd, a veritable beauty of a man in the finest apparel, wearing tarboosh and turban and a long-sleeved robe purfled with gold.
Kaimakam Tabari put out his Turkish cigarette, adjusted his tarboosh, went in to kiss his wife, to whom he owed so much, and started his walk to the office.
This exotically flavored novel follows four generations of a Greek Catholic French-speaking Syrian clan living in Cairo, whose patriarch builds his wealth by manufacturing the tarboosh, or fez.
A tall dignitary in tarboosh and white robes explained, "Emir Tewfik ibn Alafa has never spoken to a Jew and has no intention of starting now."
The School's student uniform consisted of a dark suit, bow tie, and Sidara Faisaliyah (Sudarp - small black hat), which was later changed to the Tarboosh (fez).
There he was in his long white shirt, his shaved head topped by a red tarboosh, settled into the cool shade of a nearby temple, reading Charles de Bernard and feeling oh so exquisitely bored.
One candidate has suggested that Egyptians go back to wearing the tarbush - or fez.
Susannah Tarbush argued "that most, if not all, the actors are Jewish."
It is also referred to as tarbush, checheya and phecy.
The kaffiyeh replaced the tarbush in the 1930s.
The leaves can be consumed in moderation for their nutritional value, but a diet composed only of tarbush can be fatal.
Kassir depicts Salam as "elegant in manner and possessed of a noble bearing, in public always dressed in the European style while wearing the Ottoman tarbush."
Creosote Bush, Viscid Acacia (Acacia neovernicosa), and Tarbush (Flourensia cernua) dominate the northern portion.
Flourensia cernua is a species of flowering plant in the aster family known by the English common name tarbush and the Spanish common names hojasé, hojasén, and hoja ancha.
From the peaks of Jebel el Bab and Bab el Donya you are looking over Mount Tarbush and can see El Tur and the Gulf of Suez.
In Saudi Arabian Saudi Gazette, London based freelance journalist Susannah Tarbush wrote that the play "succinctly dramatizes the tragedies and ironies of history for both sides" and builds to what she calls "a devastating final scene set during the Gaza onslaught."