Use "knighthood" in a sentence

1. He was honoured with a knighthood.

2. He consistently expressed disinterest in a knighthood.

3. Knighthood was an ideal in medieval Europe.

4. Today the actor was receiving his knighthood.

5. The Queen conferred a knighthood on him.

6. The Accolade is a ceremony to confer knighthood

7. The Queen conferred knighthood on several distinguished men.

8. They'll restore your knighthood, of course they will.

9. The Queen requited his services with a knighthood.

10. The Queen has bestowed a knighthood on him.

11. 4 The Queen has bestowed a knighthood on him.

12. The King conferred a knighthood on the brave man.

13. Your father's bestowing a knighthood on one of your men.

14. He was given a knighthood for his services to literature.

15. Bachelry pl (plural only) The body of young aspirants for knighthood

16. He received his knighthood in the 1990 New Year's Honours List.

17. He was awarded a knighthood in recognition of his work for charity.

18. Others finger Salman Rushdie's knighthood as an incitement of Muslim outrage.

19. He has been honoured with a knighthood for his scientific work.

20. He was rewarded with a knighthood for his service to the government.

21. If you wanta knighthood, you might as well cry for the moon.

22. What does Bachelry mean? (obsolete) The body of young aspirants for knighthood

23. I see you've found the fortune you needed to buy your knighthood.

24. The importance of his work was recognized with a knighthood in 190

25. His services to the state were recognized with the award of a knighthood.

26. He was stripped of his knighthood after he was convicted of stealing from the company.

27. Kutch Quinaielt ,mainframe Basiated knighthood-errant inwalls Afgh metensarcosis hyperaemia Osburn borborygmatic whole-and-half ,

28. The Baronetage is not part of the peerage, nor is it an order of knighthood

29. The honorees were awarded the accolade not necessarily for their knighthood, but because of special services.

30. A high place in court, a knighthood, my sister's legs spreading open for you at night.

31. One Wills wife also became a dame, and the husband of a Wills received a knighthood.

32. How the pure knighthood was destroyed by adulterous love and the horror of civil war.

33. To the knighthood, or chivalry, of the Middle Ages war had long given a sense of purpose.

34. 19 But he had ridden up on a valiant steed with all the trappings of chivalrous knighthood.

35. 21 Tianji's founder Derek Ling and tianji COO Mr. Feifan received Knighthood at the same party.

36. A knighthood next Whitsun,[Sentencedict.com ] and we can sort out the job you want next week.

37. Those entitled to a collar of an order of knighthood wear it over (and attached to) the cape.

38. He'd be very unlikely to stay with her or marry her, particularly with a knighthood in the offing.

39. In 1997, he received an honorary knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II at a ceremony in Buckingham Palace.

40. It was a wonderful hour or more and later Ian Woosnam called for a knighthood for Jacklin.

41. A study of Richard II's Conferments of knighthood provides an interesting opportunity to unite these disparate strands of inquiry

42. He got a knighthood as well as a fortune for his pains - the first professional sportsman to do so.

43. 30 He got a knighthood as well as a fortune for his pains - the first professional sportsman to do so.

44. This name generator will give you 10 random names for Chivalric orders (also called orders of knighthood, knight orders, and equestrian orders)

45. Chivalric - characteristic of the time of chivalry and knighthood in the Middle Ages; "Chivalric rites"; "the knightly years"

46. At the close of the exhibition he was honoured by foreign sovereigns, and the queen offered him knighthood, which, however, he did not accept.

47. Synonyms & Antonyms of Conferring 1 to give the ownership or benefit of (something) formally or publicly the British monarch continues to confer knighthood on …

48. Synonyms & Antonyms of Conferred 1 to give the ownership or benefit of (something) formally or publicly the British monarch continues to confer knighthood on …

49. He said four Fifa members had behaved unethically during the bid process, one asking for a knighthood, and another asking for a payment of several million dollars.

50. On the Portuguese side, one name comes down in history, Henrique Dias, who was awarded noble status by the monarch, but not the knighthood in the Order of Christ as promised.

51. One was a Potiguara chieftain who came to be known as Dom Antônio Filipe Camarão, who was rewarded for his loyalty to the Portuguese by being made a knighthood in the Order of Christ.

52. After the end of the war he moved to London, where his administrative talents were recognized when he was appointed a full colonel, and in 1784 he received a knighthood from King George III.

53. In the United Kingdom a Baronet is a man who has the title Sir, like a knight, but who is neither a senior member of one of the orders of chivalry, sometimes called orders of knighthood, nor

54. Present tense third-person singular of confer Synonyms & Antonyms of Confers 1 to give the ownership or benefit of (something) formally or publicly the British monarch continues to confer knighthood on those who are outstanding in their fields of endeavor

55. An order of chivalry, order of knighthood, Chivalric order, or equestrian order is an order of knights typically founded during or inspired by the original Catholic military orders of the Crusades (circa 1099–1291), paired with medieval concepts of ideals of chivalry.

56. Knight Banneret definition is - a knight of an ancient English order of knighthood that was commonly conferred as a reward for valor on the field of battle and that entitled the holder to bear a banner rather than the pennon of a knight bachelor.

57. ‘There is a faint trace of a smile, but he does not flinch: whatever the honorary Boyo's faults, he is unlikely to be bought with a knighthood.’ ‘TV advertising ain't cheap, Boyo.’ ‘For instance, if I swear at politicians, I can generally explain why I do it and the Boyo gets to find out a bit more.’

58. ‘He was now an author of world renown, a Baronet, the friend of kings and princes and since 1821, Laird of Abbotsford, his new country seat in the Borders.’ ‘Having previously declined a knighthood, Heaton was made a Baronet in 1912.’ ‘In 1608 he was knighted, and was created a Baronet in 1611, two years before his death.’

59. It is only afterwards that, surviving many minor gods of war, he becomes a leader of hosts, a sort of divine knight and patron of knighthood; and, through the old intricate connexion of love and war, and that Amorousness which is the universally conceded privilege of the soldier's life, he comes to be very near Aphrodite, -- the paramour of the goddess of physical beauty.

60. I think he rather gloried in the Contumely, but fifty years earlier he might have been visited by a "lettre de cachet," instead of a knighthood; for we can not forget how, in Eighteen Hundred Fifteen, Parliament refused to pay for the Elgin Marbles because, as Lord Falmouth put it, "These relics will tend to prostitute England to the depth of unbelief that engulfed Pagan Greece.

61. "The Knight's Tale" features many of the tropes of Courtly love: the Greek hero Theseus promises "by the faith which knights to knighthood bore, / And whate'er else to chivalry belongs" to avenge the suffering of women who have been wronged by Creon of Thebes (312), and two knights are deeply in love with Emily, who is "fairer to be seen / Than the fair lily on the flow'ry green" (313).

62. "Anyhow, he is dead now" "I think they're asleep; Anyhow, they're quiet" "I don't know what happened to it; anyway, it's gone" "anyway, there is another factor to consider" "I don't know how it started; in any case, there was a brief scuffle" "in any event, the government faced a serious protest" "but at any rate he got a knighthood for it