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Definition of Taberd
1. n. See Tabard.
Definition of Taberd
1. a medieval peasant's overcoat [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Taberd
Literary usage of Taberd
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Quarterly Register by American Education Society (1832)
"Mr. taberd, the superior of the mission, and bishop of ... Though very ill, he
was compelled to labor hard. Still, after some time, Messrs. taberd ..."
2. Heralds and Heraldry in Ben Jonson's Plays, Masques and Entertainments by Arthur Huntington Nason (1907)
"taberd. A tabard, or herald's coat, regularly bore armorial insignia. LOVE'S WELCOME
AT BOLSOVER. Wks, III, 221. Hey for the lily, for, and the blended rose ..."
3. The American Quarterly Register by American Education Society (1831)
"Mr. taberd, the superior of the mission, and bishop of ... Though very ill, he
was compelled to labor hard. Still, aftet some time, Messrs. taberd ..."
4. The Chinese Repository by Elijah Coleman Bridgman, S. W. Williams (1840)
"Of the uncorrupted Chinese language, Msgr. taberd seems to know hardly more than
we do of its somewhat spurious offspring of Cochin- china and of ..."
5. Bulletin of the New York Public Library by New York Public Library (1909)
"Wiss. Berlin. Abh. Philol.-Hist. Kl. 1855. pp. 115-130. Berlin, 1856. 4°.)
taberd (Jean Louis). Cochin-Chinese vocabulary. Vocabulaire cochin-chinois. ..."
6. Minor Poets of the Caroline Period by George Saintsbury (1906)
"red upon crimson in the taberd—is this justifiable ? 3034 Again one must suspect
some mock-heroic purpose in this turning of the tables en ..."