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词汇 cockade
释义

Definition of cockade in English:

cockade

nounkɒˈkeɪdkɑˈkeɪd
  • A rosette or knot of ribbons worn in a hat as a badge of office, or as part of a livery.

    帽徽(帽上的玫瑰形标记或缎带结);帽章

    the cap bore the traditional cockade in silver, blue, and red
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He argues that participation in political institutions (from voting to wearing cockades and singing republican hymns) led to a sense of empowerment among villagers.
    • After many noisy toasts had been drunk, and none to the nation, the national cockade was said to have been trampled as the air rang with unpatriotic slogans.
    • The wives and daughters of leading artists dressed in white with tricolor cockades in their hair when they went to publicly donate their jewelry.
    • This was often adorned with a cockade and gold lace.
    • For the head they wear a straw hat, wide brim and a cockade on the left side.
    • The country is peopled with patriots in red caps and tricoloured cockades, armed with national muskets and sabres.
    • I greeted him, pinning a cheery red, white and blue cockade to his hat.
    • This helmet plaque, with the remains of a tricolour cockade and an imperial eagle upon it, must be that of someone who fought at Borodino.
    • Two flunkeys stood at the back of the carriage and the little cockades in their hats were fashioned according to the rank of their employer.
    • Although the external decoration varied from garland to garland, similarities did exist consisting of ‘printed paper rosettes, cockades, and silk hangings’.
    • They were staunch Jacobites, and even after Culloden they continued to bear arms and wear the white cockade.
    • In his bonnet the champion sports a cockade neither of Jacobite white nor of Hanoverian black.
    • The guards on both sides - the opposing side equally smart with dark green cockades - were rapid-marching to and fro.

Derivatives

  • cockaded

  • adjectivekɒˈkeɪdɪdkɑˈkeɪdəd
    • A well-bred innocent, dressed in elegant sober clothes and perhaps from the provinces, falls victim to a couple of cockaded predators, preposterous in their ragged finery.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • This shows the troops, wearing their cockaded hats and carrying banners decorated with cockerels swarming into the Piazza del Popolo.
      • Outside in a corridor is an old gent in a white uniform and a cockaded turban who has spent 37 years in a gilded cage slowly shuddering up and down a narrow stairwell.

Origin

Mid 17th century: from French cocarde, originally in bonnet à la coquarde, from the feminine of obsolete coquard 'saucy'.

Rhymes

abrade, afraid, aid, aide, ambuscade, arcade, balustrade, barricade, Belgrade, blade, blockade, braid, brigade, brocade, cannonade, carronade, cascade, cavalcade, colonnade, crusade, dissuade, downgrade, enfilade, esplanade, evade, fade, fusillade, glade, grade, grenade, grillade, handmade, harlequinade, homemade, invade, jade, lade, laid, lemonade, limeade, made, maid, man-made, marinade, masquerade, newlaid, orangeade, paid, palisade, parade, pasquinade, persuade, pervade, raid, serenade, shade, Sinéad, staid, stockade, stock-in-trade, suede, tailor-made, they'd, tirade, trade, Ubaid, underpaid, undismayed, unplayed, unsprayed, unswayed, upbraid, upgrade, wade

Definition of cockade in US English:

cockade

nounkäˈkādkɑˈkeɪd
  • A rosette or knot of ribbons worn in a hat as a badge of office or party, or as part of a livery.

    帽徽(帽上的玫瑰形标记或缎带结);帽章

    the cap bore the traditional cockade in silver, blue, and red
    Example sentencesExamples
    • This was often adorned with a cockade and gold lace.
    • The guards on both sides - the opposing side equally smart with dark green cockades - were rapid-marching to and fro.
    • For the head they wear a straw hat, wide brim and a cockade on the left side.
    • The wives and daughters of leading artists dressed in white with tricolor cockades in their hair when they went to publicly donate their jewelry.
    • He argues that participation in political institutions (from voting to wearing cockades and singing republican hymns) led to a sense of empowerment among villagers.
    • After many noisy toasts had been drunk, and none to the nation, the national cockade was said to have been trampled as the air rang with unpatriotic slogans.
    • Although the external decoration varied from garland to garland, similarities did exist consisting of ‘printed paper rosettes, cockades, and silk hangings’.
    • They were staunch Jacobites, and even after Culloden they continued to bear arms and wear the white cockade.
    • I greeted him, pinning a cheery red, white and blue cockade to his hat.
    • In his bonnet the champion sports a cockade neither of Jacobite white nor of Hanoverian black.
    • Two flunkeys stood at the back of the carriage and the little cockades in their hats were fashioned according to the rank of their employer.
    • The country is peopled with patriots in red caps and tricoloured cockades, armed with national muskets and sabres.
    • This helmet plaque, with the remains of a tricolour cockade and an imperial eagle upon it, must be that of someone who fought at Borodino.

Origin

Mid 17th century: from French cocarde, originally in bonnet à la coquarde, from the feminine of obsolete coquard ‘saucy’.

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