cogware

English

Noun

cogware (usually uncountable, plural cogwares)

  1. A coarse cloth of the 14th century.
    • 1964, L.F. Salzman, English Industries of the Middle Ages, page 207:
      The better quality was used for ordinary cloths, and the worst was made up into coarse cloth known as cogware and Kendal cloth, three quarters of a yard broad, and worth from 40d. to 5s. the piece. The term cogware seems to have sprung from its being sold to cogmen, the crews of the ships called cogs; but whether for their own use, or for export is not quite clear.
  2. A coarse, narrow cloth, like frieze, used by the lower classes in the 16th century.
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