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surcoat Meaning in Bengali



 মধ্যযুগীয় আঙরাখাবিশেষ,

সাধারণত ধনী উপাদানের আলগা বাইরের কোট

Noun:

মধ্যযুগীয় আঙরাখাবিশেষ,





surcoat's Usage Examples:

A surcoat or surcote is an outer garment that was commonly worn in the Middle Ages by both men and women in Western Europe.


smock, which acted as a slip, and under the formal outer garment or gown/surcoat.


Middle Ages characterized by full-body steel plate without a surcoat.


Around 1420 the surcoat, or "coat of arms" as it was known in England, began to disappear.


cuirass, began to be worn without any surcoat; but in the concluding quarter of the century the short surcoat, with full short sleeves, known as a "tabard".


, shield), surcoat, or tabard.


also known as a rank badge, was a large embroidered badge sewn onto the surcoat of an official in Imperial China, Korea, Vietnam, and the Ryukyu Kingdom.


Like other officers of arms, a herald would often wear a surcoat, called a tabard, decorated with the coat of arms of his master.


plates riveted to the inside of a surcoat.


There is debate regarding whether the plates inside the armoured surcoat overlapped, but the armour is otherwise.


The gunna was also called a cote, surcoat or a robe.


Men wore a tunic, cote or cotte with a surcoat over a linen shirt.


One of these surcoats was the cyclas, which began as a rectangular piece.


removes the Robe Royal and Stole Royal, exchanges the crimson surcoat for the purple surcoat and is enrobed in the Imperial Robe of purple velvet.


Waffenrock ([also Waffenkleid] English: surcoat or tunic) was originally a medieval German term for an outer garment, worn by knights over their armor.



surcoat's Meaning':

a loose outer coat usually of rich material

Synonyms:

coat;

Antonyms:

undress;

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