armour








[ad_1] noun Chiefly British.
  1. armor.

noun

  1. Philip Dan·forth [dan-fawrth, -fohrth] /ˈdæn fɔrθ, -foʊrθ/, 1832–1901, U.S. meat-packing industrialist.

noun

  1. any covering worn as a defense against weapons.
  2. a suit of armor.
  3. a metallic sheathing or protective covering, especially metal plates, used on warships, armored vehicles, airplanes, and fortifications.
  4. mechanized units of military forces, as armored divisions.
  5. Also called armament. any protective covering, as on certain animals, insects, or plants.
  6. any quality, characteristic, situation, or thing that serves as protection: A chilling courtesy was his only armor.
  7. the outer, protective wrapping of metal, usually fine, braided steel wires, on a cable.

verb (used with object)

  1. to cover or equip with armor or armor plate.

noun

  1. any defensive covering, esp that of metal, chain mail, etc, worn by medieval warriors to prevent injury to the body in battle
  2. the protective metal plates on a tank, warship, etc
  3. military armoured fighting vehicles in general; military units equipped with these
  4. any protective covering, such as the shell of certain animals
  5. nautical the watertight suit of a diver
  6. engineering permanent protection for an underwater structure
  7. heraldic insignia; arms

verb

  1. (tr) to equip or cover with armour

noun

  1. the US spelling of armour

chiefly British English spelling of armor (q.v.); for suffix, see -or.

n.

c.1300, “mail, defensive covering worn in combat,” also “means of protection,” from Old French armeure “weapons, armor” (12c.), from Latin armatura “arms, equipment,” from arma “arms, gear” (see arm (n.2)). Figurative use from mid-14c.

Meaning “military equipment generally,” especially siege engines, is late 14c. The word might have died with jousting if not for late 19c. transference to metal-shielded machinery beginning with U.S. Civil War ironclads (first attested in this sense in an 1855 report from the U.S. Congressional Committee on Naval Affairs).

v.

mid-15c., from armor (n.). Related: Armored; armoring.

see chink in one’s armor; knight in shining armor.

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