Dictionary
rosette
noun
An imitation of a rose by means of ribbon or other material, used especially as an ornament or a badge.
Exact(51)
Black must be freezing as she takes out her Scottish National party rosette and pins it to her lapel, but beams warmly.
Yesterday's show in Claridge's ballroom ticked the heritage box with the village fete rosette ribbons that trailed from her signature mini prom dresses, and a pair of green corduroy jodhpurs.
All that matters is building up that camp committed to ousting David Cameron: whether your individual MP wears a red or yellow rosette makes no odds.
Perhaps convincing a constituency that electing the same MP wearing a different rosette represents real change is a magic trick worthy of TV.
All of them also despise each other.Mr Scargill's SLP probably has picked up some support from disenchanted Labour voters, but this new support comes from seats which have huge Labour majorities, implying that most people would vote for the proverbial donkey if it wore a Labour rosette.
"We used to say that all you had to do to get elected round here was to buy a poodle and wear a blue rosette," says a member of a Labour team out campaigning on a paved shopping street.Hove now feels more like a poor neighbour to louche Brighton, with its bars and clubs.
Similar(9)
In 2010, the Tories had an influx of young people and wiped us off the radar, this time we're way ahead A four-minute drive away in Furzton, a neat residential area comprising hundreds of new-build houses, a rival band of activists form around a red rosette-wearing jack russell named Darcy.
In vitro, the neuroepithelial cells lack appropriate signals from the surrounding embryo, so that instead of turning into a neural tube they organise themselves into rosette-shaped structures.
Plants adapted to these conditions include species of the Arctic poppy (Papaver), some rushes (Juncus), small saxifrages (Saxifraga), and a few other rosette-forming herbaceous species.
Blackheart malleable iron, on the other hand, is made by annealing white iron in a neutral atmosphere, again at a temperature of 900° C. In this process, cementite is decomposed to form rosette-shaped graphite nodules, which are less embrittling than flakes.
A succulent, the green Mexican rose (Echeveria gilva), is called wax-rosette for its cluster of waxy leaves.
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