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to coronet
noun
A small crown worn by a noble. In the British system, they are worn only at coronations. The German equivalent is Adelskrone.
Exact(1)
And on a wider level, crowns come in many other designs - from the circlet to coronet, diadem to tiara, the polos, Roman laurel wreath, the ancient Egyptian nemes and pschent to the American Indian war bonnet.
Similar(59)
Aside from kings and queens, the only individuals authorised to wear crowns (as opposed to coronets) are the Kings of Arms, the United Kingdom's senior heraldic officials.
He'll then give you a Master Ball, then head to Mt. Coronet to finish what he started.
JD Wetherspoon had apologised to the eight individuals who were denied entry to the Coronet for any "upset and distress" caused, he added.
From there she went with the show to the Old Town Theater in San Diego, then to the Coronet Theater in Los Angeles.
Her mother, a ski instructor, works November to April at the Park City Mountain Resort and from June to October at Coronet Peak and the Remarkables in Queenstown, New Zealand.
On 17 November 2011, a group of delegates from the Traveller Movement annual conference, which included an inspector of Cheshire constabulary, a senior lawyer and partner of a law firm, a priest, and two Irish Traveller women headed to the Coronet for an early evening pint.
Ulcerative lesions are typically located on the plantar skin between the heel bulbs and adjacent to the coronet.
Shaped whale-tooth pendants are found in the earliest phase of Marquesan culture (ad 300 600), as are small perforated shell disks that might have been attached to the coronets typical of later periods.
Dukes were the first individuals authorised to wear coronets.
For example, they are entitled to use coronets and supporters on their achievements of arms.
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