0 past simple and past participle of crown
1 to put a crown on someone's head in an official ceremony that makes that person king or queen:
2 If something crowns something else, it is on or around the top of it:
Even when she was crowned separately from her husband, the arrangement of ceremonies closely echoed those of the four days of a king's coronation.
Some of the earlier families had even crowned their career with a title of nobility.
While his achievements were crowned with many honours, they rode lightly on his shoulders.
A wall of glazing is crowned by a roof of twisted strips, converging at the apex.
In some cases, anticlericals painted churches red, heaped religious images on the bonfire and performed liturgical burlesques in which bulls were crowned bishop.
Seeds passed by gorillas had the highest germination rate (62%) and those passed by the crowned guenon had the lowest (38%).
This event takes the form of a triangular depolarization that is crowned with a highfrequency burst of action potentials.
Here we struggle, that elsewhere we may be crowned.