tabard Meaning & Definition

  • En [ ˈtæb.ɑːd]
  • Us [ ˈtæb.ɚd]

Meaning of tabard In English

More Definitions of tabard

Examples of tabard

  • I should have thought that there would have been a fair number of eager toom tabards in that lot.

  • Is it reason-able any longer to preserve the spectacle of distinguished ladies and gentlemen performing a stately saraband in heraldic tabard or mediaeval dressing-gown?

  • A surviving garment similar to the medieval tabard is the monastic scapular.

  • Officers may also be issued with a simple tabard for traffic duties.

  • Though his memorial brass does not survive, sketches of it do that show him wearing a tabard and crown.

  • The next layer is the monastic scapular, which is a tabard-like garment worn over the tunic.

  • Like other officers of arms, a herald would often wear a surcoat, called a tabard, decorated with the coat of arms of his master.

  • They wear a green or blue tabard, depending on what town they are from.

More Examples of tabard

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May 10, 2021

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