Definition of Cramoisy. Meaning of Cramoisy. Synonyms of Cramoisy

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Cramoisy. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Cramoisy and, of course, Cramoisy synonyms and on the right images related to the word Cramoisy.

Definition of Cramoisy

Cramoisy
Cramoisie Cra*moi"sie Cramoisy Cra*moi"sy(kr?-moi"z?), a. [F. cramoisi crimson. See Crimson.] Crimson. [Obs.] A splendid seignior, magnificent in cramoisy velevet. --Motley.

Meaning of Cramoisy from wikipedia

- Cramoisy (French pronunciation: [kʁamwazi]) is a commune in the Oise department in northern France. Cramoisy station has rail connections to Beauvais and...
- Cramoisy is a railway station located in the commune of Cramoisy in the Oise department, France. The station is served by TER Hauts-de-France trains (Beauvais...
- d'Orleans; Cramoisy, Gabriel; Cramoisy, Sebastien; Sirmond, Jacques (1646). Theodulfi aurelianensis episcopi Opera. Parisiis: apud Sebastianum Cramoisy ... et...
- m****criptorum librorum (in Latin). Vol. Tomus secundus. Paris: Sebastien Cramoisy. pp. 279–342. La chronique de Geoffroi de Breuil, prieur de Vigeois, éd...
- George Gibbs, Alphabetical Vocabulary of the Chinook Language, New York : Cramoisy Press, 1863. Sapir, E. (1926). "A Chinookan Phonetic Law". International...
- a Jesuit who published a biography of Pierre d'Aubusson (Paris, Mabre-Cramoisy, 1677) at the behest of Marshall d'Aubusson-La Feuillade.[citation needed]...
- secundus: rerum aquitanicarum. . . . ed. Philippe Labbe (Paris: Sebastian Cramoisy, 1657), 325–26. Watson, 453. Watson, 453. Debord, 573; and Watson, 453...
- facultate et animi prin****tu (in Latin). Paris: Sebastian Cramoisy (1.) & Sebastian Mabre-Cramoisy. Ptolemaios, Claudius (1663). De iudicandi facultate et...
- tomes et dediez à la Reyne Regente (in French), Paris: Sébastien Cramoisy et Gabriel Cramoisy, retrieved 2017-11-16 Société d'Histoire des Ardennes (March...
- 1400, and its earlier forms include cremesin, crymysyn and cramoysin (cf. cramoisy, a crimson cloth). These were adapted via Old Spanish from the Medieval...