Definition of "furbelow"
furbelow
noun
plural furbelows
A frill, flounce, or ruffle, as on clothing; a decorative piece of fabric, especially one gathered or pleated as into a ruffle, etc.
Quotations
I do not think that from the blissful time when I was sixteen, up to my present solemn five-and-thirty, I could ever have been tempted to look a second time at any miss under the chaperonship of such a dame as that feather and furbelow lady.
1839, Frances Trollope, chapter I, in The Widow Barnaby. [...] In Three Volumes, volume II, London: Richard Bentley, […], pages 24–25
All the other furbelows, and portions of this one[this Medusa] that lay below the expansion, floated as usual through the water, except that on some occasions an accessory power was obtained by pressing a portion of another furbelow to the side of the glass and making it adhere just like the portion that was exposed to the surface of the air.
1863, John George Wood, The Illustrated Natural History, page 745
Each plant has several oarweed fronds on the top of a flat stem, well adapted to swaying in one direction but rigid in the other; along the rigid edges, where the water flows and eddies, develop the wavy furbelows.
1964, E. J. H. Corner, The Life of Plants, University of Chicago Press, published 2002, page 76
(by extension) A small, showy ornamentation.
Quotations
The band played ceaselessly. Even when the other instruments were resting the pianist kept up his monotonous vamping, with a dreary furbelow for embellishment here and there, to which some few of the dancers continued to shuffle round the floor.
1954, Alexander Alderson, chapter 4, in The Subtle Minotaur
verb
third-person singular simple present furbelows, present participle furbelowing, simple past and past participle furbelowed
(transitive) To adorn with a furbelow; to ornament.
Quotations
Mrs. Palmer, and her furbelowed daughters-in-law, who will probably carry enough of the scarlet fever about them, to remind you unpleasantly of the officiousness which preserved the lives of three daughters, when two might have been parted with advantageously enough.
1838 (date written), L[etitia] E[lizabeth] L[andon], “(please specify the page)”, in Lady Anne Granard; or, Keeping up Appearances. […], volume I, London: Henry Colburn, […], published 1842, pages 224–225