Livery
A livery is a uniform worn by a civilian person. In the time of Chaucer "livery" referred to an allowance of any kind (for instance the city of Exeter in Devon, England has a street called "Livery Dole" after the Livery Dole Almshouses and Chapel, founded in March 1591), but especially clothes delivered (French livrée) to servants and members of the household. Such things might be kept in a "livery cupboard." The sense later contracted to servants' rations and distinctive standardized outfits, like the knee-breeches worn by footmen in grand houses until World War I, and to provender for horses, from which we have inherited "livery stable" (1705). ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
\n\");}
//-->
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ From this core meaning, multiple extended or specialist meanings have derived. Examples include: ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The term is rarely if ever applied in a military context, so it would be unusual for "livery" to refer to a military uniform or the painting of a military vehicle. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Uniform: This page describes uniform in the sense of clothing. For other meanings, see uniform (disambiguation).... Chaucer: REDIRECT Geoffrey Chaucer... Exeter: The city of Exeter is the county town of Devon, in England, UK. It is located at . In the 2001 census its population was recorded at 111,066. The city's motto, Semper fidelis, was suggested by Elizabeth I.... | ~ Table of Content ~
\n\");}
//-->
~ Related Subjects ~Devon (2) - England (2) - Livery stable (1) - City (1) - World War I (1) - Horses (1) - Provender (1) - Semper fidelis (1) - Elizabeth I (1) - 2001 (1) - County town (1) - UK (1) - Grand houses (1) - Almshouse (1) - March (1) -~ Community ~
| ||||||||
Lexicon - Contact us/Report abuse - Privacy Policy - Spiritus-Temporis.com ©2005. - stvers1 - 2012-02-11 - evol2 - 0.35