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écarté
[ ey-kahr-tey; British ey-kahr-tey; French ey-kar-tey ]
noun
- a card game for two players.
écarté
/ ekarte; eɪˈkɑːteɪ /
noun
- a card game for two, played with 32 cards and king high
- ballet
- a body position in which one arm and the same leg are extended at the side of the body
- ( as adjective )
the écarté position
Word History and Origins
Origin of écarté1
Word History and Origins
Origin of écarté1
Example Sentences
They feel “écarté,” or rejected.
He added, “It’s great to feel you’re a soldier in this larger battle, and what you’re fighting is the big republic that imposes all these things on you” — unemployment, non-halal school menus, a ban on the full veil and minarets, a paucity of mosques and a pervasive sense of being “écarté,” or rejected.
"They are not seen, sir; besides, whenever I examine the beauty of a woman, 'la premiere chose que j'ecarte, ce sont les jambes'."
After supper, Cæsar and Captain Crouch, who had entirely recovered from his faintness, played écarté with an exceedingly dirty pack of cards.
Fothergill and I are going to play ecarté.”
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