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cockade
[ ko-keyd ]
noun
- a rosette, knot of ribbon, etc., usually worn on the hat as part of a uniform, as a badge of office, or the like.
cockade
/ kɒˈkeɪd /
noun
- a feather or ribbon worn on military headwear
Derived Forms
- cockˈaded, adjective
Other Words From
- cock·aded adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of cockade1
Word History and Origins
Origin of cockade1
Example Sentences
"One can't help wonder if any of the cockades in their uniforms, or the promotions throughout 'successful' careers, corresponds to the murder of innocent civilians committed over a decade ago."
The Reverend towered over the rickety altar, his fiery crew cut bristling like a woodpecker’s cockade.
Oh, to wear such a great coat with large buttons and a velvet collar and a squashed-down high hat with a ribbon cockade in the band!
The troops, resplendent in dashing new blue-and-white uniforms, with peaked shako helmets and red cockades and armed with sabres, were made up of local Tory businessmen, shopkeepers, lawyers and their sons.
The king arrived in Paris days later, Edelstein says, to declare his support of the revolution and don the tricolor cockade.
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