lappet
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -æpɪt
Noun
lappet (plural lappets)
- A small decorative fold or flap, especially of lace or muslin, in a garment or headdress.
- c. 1575,, The Langham letter, p. 47,
- Oout of hiz boozom drawn foorth a lappet of his napkin, edged with a blu la[c]e, and marked with a trulooue, a hart & a D, for Damian: for he waz but a bachelar yet.
- 1726, Jonathan Swift, Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, London: Benj. Motte, Volume 1, Part 2, Chapter 1, p. 161,
- […] lifting up the Lappet of his Coat, he put me gently into it, and immediately ran along with me to his Master […]
- 1748, John Cleland, Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, London: G. Fenton, 1749, Volume 2, pp. 202-203,
- […] he was presently undrest, all to his shirt, the fore-lappet of which, as he lean’d languishingly on me, he smilingly pointed to me, to observe, as it bellied out, or rose, and fell, according to the unruly starts of the motion behind it:
- 1815, William Hazlitt, “Mr. Harley’s Fidget” in A View of the English Stage, London: John Warren, 1821, p. 139,
- He wears […] a white wig, the curls of which hang down like lappets over his shoulders, and form a good contrast with the plump, rosy, shining face beneath it.
- 1986, Hortense Calisher, The Bobby-Soxer, Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Part 2, p. 122,
- I have small breasts that lie flattened against the chest like lappets.
- 2012, Hilary Mantel, Bring Up the Bodies, New York: Henry Holt, Chapter 2, p. 86,
- She raises her face to the light. ‘How do you think I look? What will you say of me when the king asks you? I have not seen myself in a mirror these many months.’ She pats her fur cap, pulls its lappets over her ears; laughs.
- c. 1575,, The Langham letter, p. 47,
- (zoology) A wattle or flap-like structure on the face.
- Some vultures have lappets of bare flesh on the sides of the head.
- Tompot blennies are distinguished by a pair of lappets above the eyes and dark stripes along the body.
- A head-dress made with lappets for lace pendants.
- (obsolete, anatomy) Lobe (division of an organ).
- 1634, Philemon Holland (translator), The History of the World: commonly called, The Naturall Historie of C. Plinius Secundus, London, Book 11, Chapter 45, p. 550,
- In the tender lappet of the eare is supposed to rest the seat of remembrance, which we vse to touch when we mean to take one to beare witnesse of an arrest or other thing done,
- 1653, Thomas Urquhart (translator), The First Book of the Works of Mr. Francis Rabelais, containing five books of the lives, heroick deeds and sayings of Gargantua, and his sonne Pantagruel, London: Richard Baddeley, Book 2, Chapter 14, p. 97,
- […] he ran him in with the spit a little above the navel, towards the right flank, till he pierced the third lappet of his liver,
- 1634, Philemon Holland (translator), The History of the World: commonly called, The Naturall Historie of C. Plinius Secundus, London, Book 11, Chapter 45, p. 550,
Derived terms
Verb
lappet (third-person singular simple present lappets, present participle lappeting, simple past and past participle lappeted)
- (transitive) To decorate with, or as if with, lappets.
- 1824, Walter Savage Landor, Imaginary Conversations, London: Taylor and Hessey, Volume 1, “Oliver Cromwel and Walter Noble,” p. 58,
- I would fain merit your esteem, heedless of these pursy fellows from hulks and warehouses, with one ear lappetted by the pen behind it […]
- 1824, Walter Savage Landor, Imaginary Conversations, London: Taylor and Hessey, Volume 1, “Oliver Cromwel and Walter Noble,” p. 58,
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