English edit

Adjective edit

coroneted (not comparable)

  1. Alternative spelling of coronetted
    • 1870, Henry Blackburn, Normandy Picturesque[1]:
      She is noble by nature, and has the advantage over her coroneted cousins in being permitted to wear a white cap out of doors, and an easy and simple costume; in the fact of her limbs being braced by a life spent in the open air, and her head not being plagued with the proprieties of May Fair.
    • 1883, Sarah Tytler, Girlhood and Womanhood[2]:
      All the rest of Priorton said so and proved so, for they stood or sat for a whole day witnessing it, under a scorching sun, on foot, and in every description of vehicle from a corn-cart to a coroneted carriage.
    • 1915, J. Storer Clouston, The Lunatic at Large[3]:
      No one could exceed him in the respect he showed to a coroneted head, even when cracked; and a bishop under his charge was always secured, as far as possible, from the least whisper of heretical conversation.