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blucher
1[ bloo-ker, -cher ]
noun
- a strong, leather half boot.
- a shoe having the vamp and tongue made of one piece and overlapped by the quarters, which lace across the instep.
ü
2[ bloo-ker, -cher; German bly-khuhr ]
noun
- Geb·hart Le·be·recht von [gep, -hah, r, t , ley, -b, uh, -, r, e, kh, t f, uh, n], 1742–1819, Prussian field marshal.
blucher
1/ -tʃə; ˈbluːkə /
noun
- obsolete.a high shoe with laces over the tongue
ü
2/ ˈçə /
noun
- üGebhard Leberecht von17421819MPrussianMILITARY: general Gebhard Leberecht von (ˈɡɛphart ˈleːbərɛçt fɔn). 1742–1819, Prussian field marshal, who commanded the Prussian army against Napoleon at Waterloo (1815)
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yvlog History and Origins
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yvlog History and Origins
Origin of blucher1
C19: named after Field Marshal ü
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
Most tantalizing of all: fragments of a shoe--a heel, partial sole and brass shoelace eyelet--apparently from a woman's blucher oxford, size 9.
From
She was smoking a pipe, and looking at her blucher boots.
From
Disencumbering himself of his ordinary garments, Lance soon found himself attired in a striped suit of coarse cloth, fitted also with rough blucher boots and a woollen cap.
From
It is a fact that they used to boil their blucher boots for twenty-four hours and eat them with weeds!
From
The boots I wore were heavy hand-sewn bluchers, two sizes too large for me.
From
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