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cheval-de-frise
[ shuh-val-duh-freez ]
noun
- a portable obstacle, usually a sawhorse, covered with projecting spikes or barbed wire, for military use in closing a passage, breaking in a defensive wall, etc.
cheval-de-frise
/ ʃəˌvældəˈfriːz /
noun
- a portable barrier of spikes, sword blades, etc, used to obstruct the passage of cavalry
- a row of spikes or broken glass set as an obstacle on top of a wall
Word History and Origins
Origin of cheval-de-frise1
Word History and Origins
Origin of cheval-de-frise1
Example Sentences
At South-west Harbor the visitor is usually desirous of inspecting the sea-wall, or cheval-de-frise of shattered rock, that skirts the shore less than three miles distant from the steamboat landing.
On one occasion after Hall, I was flown with such insolence against college restrictions that the cheval-de-frise above the back gate seemed an affront to a freeborn American.
But the greatest cause of delay was the windfall, pines and spruce of enormous girth pitched down by landslide and storm into an impassable cheval-de-frise.
After traversing this gloomy avenue for about four miles, the first symptoms of war met our eyes in the shape of a dead horse, whose ribs glared like a cheval-de-frise from a tumulus of mud.
There is a low wall there, and a cheval-de-frise on the top of it.
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