释义 |
Definition of vair in English: vairnoun vɛːvɛr mass noun1Fur obtained from a variety of red squirrel, used in the 13th and 14th centuries as a trimming or lining for garments. Example sentencesExamples - A thousand men dressed in vair followed Beduerus the butler, similarly attired, offering various drinks of every sort in goblets.
- On special feasts, the knights would bestow many robes of vair, for which reason courtiers and jugglers from Lombardy and all of Italy were drawn to Florence, where they were welcomed.
- One morning this maidservant, with a basket of cabbage greens, passed by Bito who, beforehand, had thought to dress in his finest robes of rich vair.
- All day long Cinderella wore rags and dragged her feet in clogs, but at night she whirled in fine vair shoes and glittering gowns.
- It was ordained that no ecclesiastic, but dignified clergymen, should wear vair, gray, or ermine.
2Heraldry Fur represented by interlocking rows of shield-shaped or bell-shaped figures which are typically alternately blue and white, as a tincture. Example sentencesExamples - The white and blue bell-shapes of vair usually form the equivalent of a chequerboard pattern.
- The height of a row of vair is not strictly specified, but is typically about one-fifth that of the shield.
Origin Middle English: via Old French from Latin varius (see various). Definition of vair in US English: vairnounvɛrver 1Fur, typically bluish-gray, obtained from a variety of squirrel, used in the 13th and 14th centuries as a trimming or lining for garments. Example sentencesExamples - On special feasts, the knights would bestow many robes of vair, for which reason courtiers and jugglers from Lombardy and all of Italy were drawn to Florence, where they were welcomed.
- It was ordained that no ecclesiastic, but dignified clergymen, should wear vair, gray, or ermine.
- All day long Cinderella wore rags and dragged her feet in clogs, but at night she whirled in fine vair shoes and glittering gowns.
- A thousand men dressed in vair followed Beduerus the butler, similarly attired, offering various drinks of every sort in goblets.
- One morning this maidservant, with a basket of cabbage greens, passed by Bito who, beforehand, had thought to dress in his finest robes of rich vair.
2Heraldry Fur represented by interlocking rows of shield-shaped or bell-shaped figures which are typically alternately blue and white, as a tincture. Example sentencesExamples - The height of a row of vair is not strictly specified, but is typically about one-fifth that of the shield.
- The white and blue bell-shapes of vair usually form the equivalent of a chequerboard pattern.
Origin Middle English: via Old French from Latin varius (see various). |