English edit

Etymology edit

neck +‎ plate

Noun edit

neckplate (plural neckplates)

  1. A piece of armour worn around the throat or neck; a gorget.
    • 1920, Bashford Dean, Helmets and Body Armor in Modern Warfare, Metropolitan Museum of Art, page 54:
      For a long time the neckplate or gorget was retained as part of the regular equipment and it even became exaggerated in size; but it finally became so small that [] it was little more than an ornament []
    • 1981, Protection of the Underwater Heritage, Unesco:
      Some gorget (neckplate) leather linings recovered from the Batavia (1629) were found to be in a very good state of preservation after 350 years' immersion (50). Under water, where it will invariably also be in a buried ...
    • 1991, Massachusetts Historical Society, Witness to America's Past: Two Centuries of Collecting by the Massachusetts Historical Society, Massachusetts Historical Society:
      The military gorget is an ornamental and symbolic reminder of the neckplate on a suit of armor, and was originally worn in conjunction with a nape plate at the back of the neck. Between 1650 and 1700, the nape plate was ...
  2. An armor panel on a helmet which protects the neck.
    • 1901, Wallace Collection (London, England), Sir Guy Francis Laking, Catalogue of the European Armour and Arms in the Wallace Collection at Hertford House, page 149:
      542. Half Suit. [...] German, about 1540. Consisting of -
      Open Casque with spherical skull finishing in a pointed apex, umbril, neckplate and hinged earpieces.
      Gorget and Pauldrons combined.
      Breastplate with strong tapul and laminated gussets.
    • 1994, Genji & Heike: Selections from The Tale of Genji and The Tale of the Heike, Stanford University Press, →ISBN, page 311:
      Jomyo Meishu of Tsutsui, one of the worker-monks, was wearing a dark blue tunic, a suit of black-laced armor, and a helmet with five neckplates. At his waist, there was a sword with a black lacquered hilt and scabbard; on his back, ...
    • 2001, Hōgen Monogatari: Tale of the Disorder in Hōgen, Cornell East Asia Series, page 42:
      The shot went half a shaft-length deep, slanting from the third neckplate of his helmet toward the base of his left ear.
  3. A small, typically rectangular plate on the neck of a guitar (or bass, etc) through which screws are threaded to attach the neck to the body.
    • 2008, Tony Bacon, Barry Moorhouse, The Bass Book, Hal Leonard Corporation, →ISBN:
      Maple neck with rosewood fingerboard only; commemorative neckplate.
    • 2013, Bert van der Moer, The "Recycled Bassguitar": Build One With Precision® Bass Parts, Lulu Press, Inc, →ISBN, page 20:
      Neckplate and screws
      The neckplate holds the 4 screws (actually not bolts) that connect the neck to the body and provides reenforcement[sic] for the whole construction. Neckplates can be obtained with a nice F, and even with Fender serial numbers (genuine as well as fake).
  4. A plate, used in tracheostomy, which prevents the tube from descending into the trachea.
    • 1998, United States. Patent, Trademark Office, Official Gazette of the United States Patent and Trademark Office: Patents, page 1344:
      A tracheostomy device comprising : a neckplate having an access opening; a trach head swivelly connected to said neckplate at said access opening; a tube adapted for insertion into a patient's breathing passage []
    • 2018, Terence Pires de Farias, Tracheostomy: A Surgical Guide, Springer, →ISBN, page 24:
      On the tube's neckplate, its characteristics are marked, such as its inner and outer diameters and its length. Clinicians, intensive care professionals, and surgeons must know the differences between them in order to select suitable [ones].

Alternative forms edit