accoutred


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  • adj

Synonyms for accoutred

provided with necessary articles of equipment for a specialized purpose (especially military)

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Sonam who is widely known for her sartorial elegance accoutred in a full-sleeved red and golden floor-length anarkali which she paired with a solid red dupatta.
even as he mocks the "accoutred frowsty barn," he's
This dubious understanding of empathy only becomes more evident as Milk describes the projects he undertook on his self-described quest to "build the ultimate empathy machine." Those endeavors culminated in The Treachery of Sanctuary, 2012, where viewers could stand before an interactive animation of their own silhouettes digitally accoutred with wings that responded to the movement of their arms.
Subsequently, a personalized “X-shaped” supporting garment was accoutred for 3 months to stimulate adherence of the presternal skin to the sternum [Figure 1]d.
1.) shows a man in early middle age with a strong sense of authority about him, very much in command of a group of accoutred Light Horse troopers.
Two manicured and sveltely accoutred diplomats are set against an array of objects pertaining to contemporary arts, earth sciences and cosmography.
They were accoutred in green jackets and blue trousers, in accord with the newest militia dress regulations approved in 1813.
ammunition, "and shall appear, so armed, accoutred and provided,
The force was mounted and accoutred as light Dragoons.
All the soldiers, including the person who is being operated upon, are accoutred in incongruously shiny jackboots--a symbol later to be applied to cruel and authoritarian behaviour or rule.
Indeed, the Articles of Confederation had required that "every state shall always keep up a well regulated and disciplined militia, sufficiently armed and accoutred." So, in the America of the late 1700s, "a Republican Form of Government" meant nothing less than a government that incorporated a Militia--"composed," as Virginia's Declaration of Rights stated in 1776, "of the body of the people, trained to arms." That being so, if any State today were to infringe her people's "right ...