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An attendant in the same illustration wears a red hood with a long liripipe.
She wears a black hood with a long liripipe and a scrip or bag at her waist.
The shape is evocative of the square-cut liripipe incorporated into many academic hoods (see, below).
The hood consists of a cape (known also as the 'tippet'), cowl and liripipe.
Hoods of graduates in all faculties are in a modified London pattern, with rounded corners to the cape and an angled liripipe.
In modern times, the liripipe mostly refers to an element of academic dress, the tail of the cowl of an academic hood.
Her head was covered in a white coif with a white shawl shaped in the form of a triangle going down her back like a liripipe.
Women also wore the chaperon, a draped hat based on the hood and liripipe, and a variety of related draped and wrapped turbans.
At Oxford, the bachelors' and masters' hoods use simple hoods that have lost their cape and retain only the cowl and liripipe.
A contemporary manuscript shows Segar in the black gown and hood with liripipe of Tudor court mourning worn with his herald's tabard (image, left).
Some universities only have a cape and cowl and no liripipe or just consist a cape only; these are classed separately under the Aberdeen shape style.
The BA hood is now, erroneously, cut in a modified (with a curved liripipe) Belfast simple-shape [s3] and lined with fur differently.
The tail of the hood, often quite long, was called the tippit or liripipe in English, and liripipe or cornette in French.
But a long arm reached for him almost lazily, took him by the liripipe of his capuchon and a fistful of his hair, and hauled him painfully out to the open ride.
Durham has two types of hoods for its degrees: Oxford simple shape, consisting of just a cowl and liripipe, and full shape, consisting of a cowl and cape.
Someone caught at the liripipe of her capuchon, and dragged it backwards from her head, and the tangled masses of her hair gushed down about her shoulders and streamed in the wind of her frantic passage.
He had put off his armour, and rode in black and gold, with high gauntlets of purple leather, and a fine, extravagant capuchon in the same purple draped and twisted into a flaunting hat that drooped a long liripipe about his shoulders.
Oxford bachelors and masters use a 'simple' (or 'Burgon' shape) consisting of hood with a cowl (headcovering) but without a cape, whereas the University of Cambridge uses a 'full' shape, with both cowl and square cape and substantial liripipe for all hoods.