baldric
suomi-englanti sanakirjabaldric englannista suomeksi
miekkavyö
Substantiivi
baldric englanniksi
(senseid) A broad belt, originally of leather and often richly ornamented, worn diagonally from shoulder to hip (across the breast and under the opposite arm), which was formerly used to hold a sword, a bugle, etc., and is now chiefly worn for ceremonial purposes; also , any belt. (defdate)
(RQ:Thomas More Workes) What a brag-kyng maketh a beareward w&877; (quote-gloss) his ſyluer buttened bawdrike, for pride of another mannes bere?
(RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)
(RQ:Shakespeare Much Ado About Nothing Q)
(RQ:Homer Pope Iliad)
(RQ:Tennyson Poems 1833)
(RQ:Bulwer-Lytton Last of the Barons)
(RQ:R. F. Burton Sword) A soldier's bauldric is coloured red, like the wood of the bows and arrows.
(quote-journal)|volume=XIII|issue=2|page=168|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/museumjournal13univ/page/194/mode/1up|issn= 0743-8761|oclc=911890904|passage=The figure on the left, holding the severed head of the ox, has removed his sword with the baldric from which it is suspended and given it to his companion, who holds it beside his own with the baldric swinging.
(quote-book)|series=The Riftwar Legacy|seriesvolume=I|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=HarperTorch, HarperCollinsPublishers|year_published=February 2001|page=15|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/krondorbetrayal00raym/page/15/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-380-79527-7|passage=The man facing Locklear had his head covered with a red bandanna, and over his shoulder was a baldric from which a cutlass had hung. The cutlass was now carving through the air at Locklear's head.
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Publishers|Macmillan|page=167|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/alexander0000manf_l7o1/page/167/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-333-78036-7|passage=The face of the man who stood before him was hidden by a Corinthian helmet. His bronze breastplate was decorated in silver, and he carried his sword hanging from a chain-mail baldric. Over his shoulders was a cloak of blue linen that the evening breeze filled like a sail.
A (usually leather) strap from which the clapper of a bell is suspended.
(quote-book),(nb...)|year_published=1887|page=276|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=kysuAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA276|oclc=752956064|passage=Paid to the Collermaker of Leawsam for a bawdricke for the great bell … … … iij''s.''|footer=(small)
(quote-book)|edition=10th|location=London|publisher=(...) Legate|Iohannis Legati, celeberrimæ of Cambridge|Academiæ Cantabrigiensis typographi|column=1|oclc=1351220188|passage=The ''Bawdricke of a bell-clapper''. Ropalicorigia.
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Mitchell and Hughes,(nb...)|columns=18–19|columnurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=f1oMAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA19|oclc=14471017|passage=The Bells were evidently a constant source of expense, and very large sums were spent in their re-casting and re-hanging. Scarcely a year passed without some new bell-wheel, bawdricke, rope or clapper being required.
A necklace.
(RQ:Palsgrave Lesclarcissement) ma(quote-gloss)
(senseid) The (l).
(RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene) hath novv an euerlaſting place, / Mongſt thoſe tvvelue ſignes, vvhich nightly vve doe ſee / The heauens bright-ſhining baudricke to enchace; (..)
(RQ:Quarles Hadassa)