0 a slowly moving line of people or cars at a funeral
1 a slowly moving line of people or cars at a funeral
Presently the cortege started for the house, and here more stores of various kinds were loaded.
There was a large military cortege, martial music, and infantry with reversed arms.
They were conducted to their final resting place by a funeral cortege such as up to that time had never been equalled and since that time has here never been surpassed.
When she carried out her husband she was by no means content to comply with the conventional custom and follow the funeral cortege with her hair down, beating her naked breast in sight of the onlookers!
All of those people in black suits, bridesmaids, the cortege with its almost comic realism, might compromise the powerful effect of the preceding scene.
Sarabande et cortege reveals the melodious possibilities of each instrument combined with the varied sonorities of tessitura.
For elderly people to have to watch corteges proceed on their stately way could hardly drive home an unwelcome point more tellingly.