See also: caracolé

English edit

 
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Etymology edit

Borrowed from French caracole (noun, literally snail's shell), caracoler (verb).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

caracole (plural caracoles)

  1. A half-turn performed by a horse and rider in dressage.
  2. (cavalry, historical) A combat maneuver where riders of the same squadron turn simultaneously to their left or to their right.
    • 1866, Henry Howard Brownell, “Abraham Lincoln (Summer, 1865)”, in War-Lyrics and Other Poems, Boston: Ticknor and Fields, page 127:
      How the chargers neigh and champ, / (Their riders weary of camp,) / With curvet and with caracole!
    • 1975, Hans Delbrück, History of the Art of War Within the Framework of Political History, Volume 4, Greenwood Press, page 124:
      The caracole played a role well into the Thirty Years' War.
    • 2001, William P. Guthrie, Battles of the Thirty Years War, Bloomsbury Academic, page 12:
      The battle tactic of these cavalry was called the caracole, an attack with pistols. There were four main varieties which may be called the simple caracole, the true caracole, the limacon, and the Protestant caracole.
  3. (architecture) A spiral staircase.

Translations edit

Verb edit

caracole (third-person singular simple present caracoles, present participle caracoling or caracolling, simple past and past participle caracoled or caracolled)

  1. To execute a caracole.
    • 1819, Walter Scott, Ivanhoe:
      Prince John, upon a grey and high-mettled palfrey, caracoled within the lists at the head of his jovial party, laughing loud with his train, and eyeing with all the boldness of royal criticism the beauties who adorned the lofty galleries.
    • 1884, Robert Black (translator), François Guizot, Henriette Elizabeth Guizot de Witt, The History of France from the Earliest Times to 1848, Volume 1, John B. Alden, page 259,
      Finally he went out of church and caracoled about on the open, at the foot of the castle, in presence of the people eager to have their share in the spectacle.
    • 1877, John Doran, London in the Jacobite Times, Volume 1, Richard Bentley & Son, page 364:
      [] the noble bishop caracolled in the presence, on a well-trained war-horse, which the right reverend father in God bestrode in a lay habit of purple, jack-boots, his hat cocked, and his black wig tied up behind in true military fashion.
    • 1937, The Cavalry Journal, Volume 27, page 601:
      Sir Charles Oman's book mentions no instance where caracoling cavalry succeeded unaided in breaking a resolute body of infantry standing firm to receive them.
    • 2010, Peter H. Wilson (translator and editor), The Thirty Years War: A Sourcebook, Macmillan Publishers (Palgrave Macmillan), page 67,
      The proper way, which I often explained to them, was too reject the bad habit of caracolling when facing the enemy.

French edit

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

Borrowed from Spanish caracol.

Noun edit

caracole f (plural caracoles)

  1. (equestrianism) caracole
  2. (architecture) caracole
  3. (Belgium) snail

Etymology 2 edit

Verb edit

caracole

  1. inflection of caracoler:
    1. first/third-person singular present indicative/subjunctive
    2. second-person singular imperative

Further reading edit

Walloon edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Spanish caracol.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

caracole f (plural caracoles)

  1. snail