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calotte
[ kuh-lot ]
calotte
/ °ìəˈ±ôÉ’³Ù /
noun
- a skullcap worn by Roman Catholic clergy
- architect a concavity in the form of a niche or cup, serving to reduce the apparent height of an alcove or chapel
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of calotte1
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of calotte1
Example Sentences
The calotte of beef was served with shallot marmalade.
White House officials also announced the menu for the hundreds of guests: a cheese plate featuring three American cheeses; butter-poached Maine lobster; and calotte of beef with triple-cooked butter potatoes.
She comes with four changes of clothes: a Kelly green ball gown, a teal suit with a calotte hat, a sweater and matching kick pleat skirt and a nightgown with a peignoir.
While the prison governor was talking with me, the coachman was standing behind him, and showed by gestures how the prisoner had been bound hand and foot, that he had a beard and a calotte on his head, and a handkerchief round his neck.
Calotte is the name given to the dome of snow at the summit of Mont Blanc.136.Glacier du Dôme.137.This is without a name.138.I do not know the origin of the term moraine.
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