This monument is of alablaster, a bust, but no coate of armes.
He adds: 'This coate of armes is in the hall at New Inne, of which house I presume Sir Thomas was, according to the education of former times.
This coate of Moreton is in the west chamber of the Katherine-wheele Inne at Great Wiccomb in Bucks, with (as I remember) the cardinall's cappe.
He was of the Sussex Mayes, as appeares by hiscoate of armes: but where borne or of what university I know not, and cannot enquire.
For some particulars as to the vizard coate and bulbegger, see p.
Ordered that the Bargeman have a new coate & britches &c.
This daye John Pinder made complaint against Janson his appˀntice, this Courte caused the vizard and coate to be brought into the Parlor, and the apprentice submitted himselfe to his Maister soe that his punishment was forborne.
And noble mindes altho the coatebe bare, Are by their semblance knowne, how great they are Bar.
We will see his fooles coate guarded,[111] ey and reguarded too from slipping out of our fingers.
His officer of arms, sore weeping, toke off hiscoate of armes, and cast it along over the cheaste right lamentablie.
Goe to then: you shall begin with a coate of easie charge to be discried.
O, when he comes forth, the skirts of his blew coate will dropp like a paint-house!
First and formost: Item, a Buff Coate fox and a paire of breeches of the same Cloth.
A little chapell at Merton, in the Earle of Shaftesbury's house, is paved with such tiles, whereon are annealed or enamelled the coate and quarterings of Horsey.
I doe think there is such another crosse at Cricklade, with the coate and crests of Hungerford.
The coate armour of the Lord Sturton is, Sable, a bend or, between six fountaines; which doe allude to these springs.
My Coate sayth he, nor yet my foulde, 100 Shall neither sheepe nor shepheard hould, except thou fauour me.
One of them presently putt on my worsted coate and drawers, flinging away his owne drawers and wastcoate that were of thin canvis ragged and torne.
When we weere gott againe so far as the farmers house where they borrowed my longe coate, they desired me to restore the coate to the owners againe.
There is a sublime sameness in Coate that reminds you of the stars that rise and set regularly just as we go to bed down here.
In "Amaryllis at the Fair" the scene is laid at Coate Farm.
He stayed with her for some years, going home to Coate every summer for a month.
But, indeed, as we shall see, Coate was never absent from Jefferies' mind for long.
The land which lies in a circle of ten miles' radius, the centre of which is Coate Farm-house, belongs to the writings of Jefferies.
He dated the letters fromCoate Farm, Swindon; so that he probably appeared to the editor and to the general public as a farmer, rather than as a newspaper reporter.
His old friends point out the short cut across the fields by which he was accustomed to walk from Coate to the office of the paper.
Within a reasonable walk fromCoate are Barbury Hill, Liddington Hill, and Ashbourne Chase; there are downs extending as far as Marlborough, over which a man may walk all day long and meet no one.
In almost everything he wrote Coate is in his mind.
I am actually crying over these delicious memories of my childhood; if ever I loved a spot of this earth, it was Coate House.
The household at Coate has been partly--but only partly--described in "Amaryllis at the Fair.
To her grandchild, Susanna Latham, was definite allotment of “my Petty coate with silke Lace.
These womens modesty drives them to weare more cloathes than their men, having alwayes a coate of cloath or skinnes wrapt like a blanket about their loynes, reaching downe to their hammes which they never put off in company.
Ascapart[139] or your countreyman Gargantua, that stuft every button of his coate with a load of hay?
Then Garter, in his Coate of Armes, and on his head he wore a Gilt Copper Crowne.
The Luse is the fresh-fish, the salt-fish, is an oldCoate Slen.
His faces owne margent didcoate such amazes, That all eyes saw his eies inchanted with gazes.
That thrust had beene mine enemy indeed, But that my Coate is better then thou know'st: I will make proofe of thine Rod.
He neede not feare the sword, for his Coate is of proofe But.
Paysant) "thynke you that thys poore Coate and simple lodging be not able to apprehend the Preceptes of Vertue?
To his son William, "my coate of Tuftaffatie and a shorte cloke of rashe, laide with parchment lace.
Coate is a quiet village, not noteworthy in any way of itself.
But these will want antiquitie: my Lord The seale of honour, whats a coate cut out But yesterday to make a man a gentleman?
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "coate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.