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chaplet
[chap-lit]
noun
a wreath or garland for the head.
a string of beads.
Roman Catholic Church.
a string of beads, one-third of the length of a rosary, for counting prayers.
the prayers recited over this.
Architecture., a small molding carved to resemble a string of beads; astragal.
Metallurgy., an object for separating the core of a mold from a wall, composed of the same metal as the casting and forming an integral part of it.
chaplet
/ ˈtʃæplɪt /
noun
an ornamental wreath of flowers, beads, etc, worn on the head
a string of beads or something similar
RC Church
a string of prayer beads constituting one third of the rosary
the prayers counted on this string
a narrow convex moulding in the form of a string of beads; astragal
a metal support for the core in a casting mould, esp for the core of a cylindrical pipe
Other Word Forms
- chapleted adjective
- unchapleted adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of chaplet1
Example Sentences
The diners themselves were wearing chaplets of flowers and graceful draperies.
ABOVE: The chaplets on the clock combined warming copper and silver.
On her head was a chaplet woven of clover.
Sometimes the lord himself set forth such arms in a formal grant, as when the baron of Greystock grants to Adam of Blencowe a shield in which his own three chaplets are charges.
They may also have forecast the time when California with her girdles of gold and chaplets of freedom would spring, Athena-like, from the Zeus brain of American enterprise.
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