English edit

Noun edit

marquisses

  1. (obsolete) plural of marquis
    • 1792, Thomas Paine, A Rod in Brine, or a tickler for T. Paine, page 16:
      To begin then: not long before this paragraph was written, P fell into doze, and dreamt, he saw Jacob's ladder with one foot standing on the earth, the other reaching up into heaven. Dukes, Marquisses, and other Peers, fancy represented to him, as standing on the upper stales; on the middle ones, Knights and Baronets, and under them, a train of Esquires and Gentlemen, reaching to the bottom.
    • 1814, Francis L. Clarke, The Life of the Most Noble Arthur Marquis and Earl of Wellington, [], volume II, London: [] J. and J. Cundee, [], page 299:
      The knights present were Earl Moira, Duke of Montrose, the Marquis of Wellesley, Marquisses of Hertford and Stafford, Earls of Chesterfield and Winchelsea, Marquis Camden, Earl of Carlisle, Earl of Westmoreland, and their Royal Highnesses the Dukes of Cambridge, Cumberland, Kent, Clarence, and York, followed by Black-rod, the Register, and Garter, the Prelate, and finally His Royal Highness the Prince Regent.
    • 1821, Letters to Richard Heber, Esq. Containing Critical Remarks on the Series of Novels Beginning with “Waverley,” and an Attempt to Ascertain Their Author., London: [] Rodwell and Martin, [], page 34:
      The sins against propriety in manners are as frequent and as glaring. I do not speak of the hoyden vivacity, harlot tenderness, and dancing-school affability, with which vulgar novel-writers always deck out their countesses and principessas, chevaliers, dukes, and marquisses; []