muumuu
                                                    英 ['muːmuː]
                                                                        美 [mʊʊ'mʊʊ]
                        
                
                
                
                
                    
                                                                                                        muumuu 英文词源
                
                
                    
                        - muumuu (n.)
- also muu-muu, 1923, from Hawaiian mu'u mu'u, literally "cut off," name given to the local adaptation of the dresses given to Island women by early 19c. Christian missionaries "in the early days when a few flowers sufficed for a garment" [Don Blanding, "Hula Moons," 1930]. So called because the native style hangs from the shoulder and omits the high neck and the train.