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Coat of arms   /koʊt əv ɑrmz/   Listen
noun
Coat  n.  
1.
An outer garment fitting the upper part of the body; especially, such a garment worn by men. "Let each His adamantine coat gird well."
2.
A petticoat. (Obs.) "A child in coats."
3.
The habit or vesture of an order of men, indicating the order or office; cloth. "Men of his coat should be minding their prayers." "She was sought by spirits of richest coat."
4.
An external covering like a garment, as fur, skin, wool, husk, or bark; as, the horses coats were sleek. "Fruit of all kinds, in coat Rough or smooth rined, or bearded husk, or shell."
5.
A layer of any substance covering another; a cover; a tegument; as, the coats of the eye; the coats of an onion; a coat of tar or varnish.
6.
Same as Coat of arms. See below. "Hark, countrymen! either renew the fight, Or tear the lions out of England's coat."
7.
A coat card. See below. (Obs.) "Here's a trick of discarded cards of us! We were ranked with coats as long as old master lived."
Coat armor. See under Armor.
Coat of arms (Her.), a translation of the French cotte d'armes, a garment of light material worn over the armor in the 15th and 16th centuries. This was often charged with the heraldic bearings of the wearer. Hence, an heraldic achievement; the bearings of any person, taken together.
Coat card, a card bearing a coated figure; the king, queen, or knave of playing cards. "'I am a coat card indeed.' 'Then thou must needs be a knave, for thou art neither king nor queen.'"
Coat link, a pair of buttons or studs joined by a link, to hold together the lappels of a double-breasted coat; or a button with a loop for a single-breasted coat.
Coat of mail, a defensive garment of chain mail. See Chain mail, under Chain.
Mast coat (Naut.), a piece of canvas nailed around a mast, where it passes through the deck, to prevent water from getting below.
Sail coat (Naut.), a canvas cover laced over furled sails, and the like, to keep them dry and clean.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Coat of arms" Quotes from Famous Books



... bring it to reason, vigorously speaks the defence of the order to which he belongs. "Despise not the masters, but, rather, honour their art. The great good you have this day received speaks loud in their praise. Not to your ancestors, however great, not to your coat of arms, your spear or sword, but to the fact that you are a singer, that you have proved yourself a master, you owe to-day your highest happiness. If then you apply to the question a grateful mind: how can that art be of no account which holds such prizes? That our masters cared for ...
— The Wagnerian Romances • Gertrude Hall

... ancestors came from. She thought that possibly they might be noblemen. But I guess there wasn't very much doin' up the tree until she got down to New York, and paid a man to tell her. She brought back an illuminated coat of arms with a lion rampantin' on top; but she was the same old Virginia still. What do I care about my ancestors! It doesn't make no difference to me. I'm just myself anyway, no matter how you figure; and I'm a lot more worried about where I'm goin' to, ...
— Hepsey Burke • Frank Noyes Westcott

... three splendid unset stones. There were numbers of elaborate old-fashioned earrings, two rope-like chains of gold adorned with jewels at intervals, and several jeweled lockets. There was a solid gold snuff-box, engraved with a coat of arms and ornamented with seventeen fine emeralds. There were, besides the three diamonds, eighty-two unset stones, among them, wrapped by itself in cotton, a ruby of extraordinary size and luster. And there was a sort of coronet or tiara, sown all ...
— Spanish Doubloons • Camilla Kenyon

... horizontal bands of yellow (top), blue, and red with the coat of arms on the hoist side of the yellow band and an arc of seven white five-pointed stars centered in the ...
— The 1999 CIA Factbook • United States. Central Intelligence Agency.

... ask you in the name of American independence, does it not appear as though there was a colored gentleman somewhere in the background? Let us examine further, and we will see that the colored man wears a British coat of arms, and has his American office on Williams street, ...
— One Thousand Secrets of Wise and Rich Men Revealed • C. A. Bogardus


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