caparisoned

English

Knight on caparisoned steed

Etymology

caparison + -ed

Adjective

caparisoned (comparative more caparisoned, superlative most caparisoned)

  1. (of a horse or elephant) Having a richly ornamented harness.
  2. Dressed in richly ornamented finery.

Verb

caparisoned

  1. simple past tense and past participle of caparison
    • 1889, Henry James, The Solution:
      She was tall and angular, and held her head very high; it was surmounted with wonderful turbans and plumages, and indeed the four ladies were caparisoned altogether in a manner of their own.
    • 1851, Henry Mayhew, “Costermongers”, in London Labour and the London Poor:
      Every kind of harness is used; some is well blacked and greased and glittering with brass, others are almost as grey with dust as the donkey itself. Some of the jackasses are gaudily caparisoned in an old carriage-harness, which fits it like a man’s coat on a boy’s back, while the plated silver ornaments are pink, with the copper showing through; others have rope traces and belly-bands, and not a few indulge in old cotton handkerchiefs for pads.
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