knight

નાઈટ
definition
verb
He was knighted in 2003 for services to public life in Scotland.
invest (someone) with the title of knight.
noun
The crossbow was really the first hand-held weapon that could be used by an untrained soldier to injure or kill a knight in plate armour.
(in the Middle Ages) a man who served his sovereign or lord as a mounted soldier in armor.
Counts, knights , barons and marquesses gathered in the guilded ballroom of the hotel to mark the focal event of the aristocratic social calendar.
(in the UK) a man awarded a nonhereditary title by the sovereign in recognition of merit or service and entitled to use the honorific u201cSiru201d in front of his name.
translation of 'knight'
noun
નાઇટનો ખિતાબ
example
He would become her 'knight' and devote himself to her service, though his passion for her would rarely be consummated.
in all your quarrels I will be your 'knight'
The primary service was military duty as a mounted 'knight' .
The 'knight' or Miles was the lowest of the military elite, a well equipped and well trained fighting man similar to the Saxon thegn or huscarl.
Indeed, the 'knight' is the only chess piece that covers an asymmetrical pattern of squares.
In 1925 Asquith accepted a peerage as Earl of Oxford and Asquith and was created a 'knight' of the garter shortly afterwards.
In chess, if you move your 'knight' on to a pawn's square, the pawn's a goner.
The order became defunct with the death of its last 'knight' , HRH The Duke of Gloucester, in 1974.
Leading the North Yorkshire awards in the Queen's Birthday Honours list, published today, is the county's newest 'knight' , Sir Robert Ogden.
In other words, the colors red and white seem to represent the 'knight' and his female beloved, respectively.
In one of Chaucer's earliest poems, The Book of the Duchess, a 'knight' is overheard in the forest lamenting the death of his lady.
Top tip for Birthday Honours - Timothy West will become a 'knight' of the realm.
In return for this, William generously made the great English earl a Norman 'knight' .
Usually, a minor 'knight' might hold a few acres from a baron, who in turn held the land from a count or earl, who in turn held large tracts of the king.
The crossbow was really the first hand-held weapon that could be used by an untrained soldier to injure or kill a 'knight' in plate armour.
Few castles can boast the historic pedigree of Cathcart, which dates back to the days of Sir Alan Cathcart, a 'knight' who served with Robert the Bruce.
The next day we see one grandmaster leaving a 'knight' unprotected and another thrusting his pawn to a sure death.
in all your quarrels I will be your 'knight'
These were made up of u2018feudalu2019 levies, in which the 'knight' owed service to his lord in return for land.
He was offering himself as my protector, my 'knight' , and it moved me deeply.
He moved his 'knight' forward and deftly captured one of her pawns.
Jerome rubbed his chin, and after a few minutes of thought, moved his 'knight' , capturing Adam's last bishop.
As the name suggests it concerns itself with chivalry, honour and 'knightly' contests.
Malory was first and foremost a chronicler of secular chivalry, and his version of the Grail story brings out the tensions between the Grail's religious idealism and its context of 'knightly' life and exploits.
Maybe a 'knight in shining armour' will come forward to assist half a million pensioners worldwide.
The barons mobilized every man they could and put six hundred 'knights' into the field.
If he had known, why hadn't he ridden in like some 'knight in shining armor' and rescued her?
The count of that land, Theobald, hosted a grand event that was attended by 'knights' from all over northern France.
Somerset's early career was in Wolsey's service and he was 'knighted' in France in 1523.
Norman Wisdom proved he had earned a place in the nation's heart after being 'knighted' by the Queen at Buckingham Palace.
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