esquire
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 16
- Words With Friends
- 17
- Letters
- 7
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Definition of esquire
8 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included
noun
- (US, usually)A lawyer.
See all 8 definitions Show less
noun
- (US, usually)A lawyer.
-
A male member of the gentry ranking below a knight.
“I am Robert Shallow, sir; a poor esquire of the county, and one of the king's justices of the peace.”
“Esquires and gentlemen are confounded together by Sir Edward Coke, who observes that every esquire is a gentleman, and a gentleman is defined to be one qui arma gerit, who bears coat-armour, the grant of which was thought to add gentility to a man's family. It is indeed a matter somewhat unsettled what constitutes the distinction, or who is a real esquire; for no estate, however large, per se confers this rank upon its owner.”
- An honorific sometimes placed after a man's name.
- A gentleman who attends or escorts a lady in public.
- (archaic)A squire; a youth who in the hopes of becoming a knight attended upon a knight
-
(obsolete)A shield-bearer, but also applied to other attendants.
“The office of the esquire consisted of several departments; the esquire for the body, the esquire of the chamber, the esquire of the stable, and the carving esquire; the latter stood in the hall at dinner, carved the different dishes, and distributed them to the guests.”
-
(rare)The lower of the halves into which a square is divided diagonally, a single gyron, but potentially larger (extending across the shield) or smaller (for example, on Mortimer's arms).
“Thre pallets between ij Esquires bast dexter and sinister of the second.”
“Mortimer, Barry of 6, or & az. an inescutcheon arg. on a chief of the first 2 pallets between as many base esquires of the second.”
“Against the theory of two wives for Sir Thomas, is the fact that the Lumley Monument mentions only one, Elizabeth. In addition she appears to have been granted the Royal Arms: 1. France and England, 2. a plain cross of Ulster, 3. as 2, 4. barry of siz, a chief three pallets, between two esquires bastions, dexter and sinister, an inescutcheon Argent, Mortimer, over all a bar sinister, which are also displayed on the monument.”
verb
- (obsolete, transitive)To attend, wait on, escort.
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
From Middle English esquier, from Old French escuyer, escuier, properly, a shield-bearer (compare modern French écuyer (“shield-bearer, armor-bearer, squire of a knight, esquire, equerry, rider, horseman”)), from Late Latin scūtārius (“shieldmaker, shield-bearer”), from Latin scūtum (“shield”); probably akin to English hide (“to cover”). The term squire is the result of apheresis. Compare equerry, escutcheon.
Words you can make from esquire
46 playable · top: QUERIES (16 pts)
Best play queries 16 points6-letter words
4 words5-letter words
6 words4-letter words
12 words3-letter words
16 words2-letter words
7 wordsHooks
2 extensions · 2 back
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