释义 |
[ ploomd ] / plumd /
adjectivehaving or appearing to have a plume or plumes. Origin of plumedFirst recorded in 1520–30; plume + -ed3 OTHER WORDS FROM plumedun·plumed, adjectiveWords nearby plumedplumb rule, plumbum, plumcot, plum duff, plume, plumed, plumelet, plume moth, plume oneself, plummer block, Plummer-Vinson syndrome Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for plumedTwo plumed carabineri stood guard as Yoko Ono received a Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement and gave a speech ending “Peace.” My Biennale Favorites|Anthony Haden-Guest|June 8, 2009|DAILY BEAST No foreign Court exulted: all plumed themselves upon praising and honouring his memory. The Memoirs of Louis XIV., His Court and The Regency, Complete|Duc de Saint-Simon I was too astonished to speak and stood gazing upon the handsome face of a young man in a plumed hat and lace-frilled doublet. Mizora: A Prophecy|Mary E. Bradley He thought of the plumed Indians and of the birds of splendid plumage that Columbus had brought back. The Story of Magellan and The Discovery of the Philippines|Hezekiah Butterworth
Russia plumed herself on giving the famous Corsican his first blow, while the Battle of Waterloo was the last. A Little Girl in Old Washington|Amanda M. Douglas This warrior seized his canoe and came paddling down the waters, plumed with eagle-feathers, with a rifle in his hand. In The Boyhood of Lincoln|Hezekiah Butterworth
Words related to plumedfelicitate, congratulate, swagger, exult, boast, crow, gasconade, preen, pique, brag, prance, presume, strut, swell, vaunt, overbear, flatter oneself, glory in, puff up, revel in |