gallantry
IPA: gˈæɫʌntri
noun
- courage
- chivalrous courtliness, especially towards women
- an instance of gallant behaviour or speech
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Examples of "gallantry" in Sentences
- His gallantry is suffused with mulishness.
- His gallantry was conspicuous at the battle.
- For gallantry, he was promoted to the rank of major.
- His gallantry was conspicuous at the battles of Worth and Sedan.
- He was cited for bravery and gallantry at the Battle of Monterrey.
- For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty in tending the wounded.
- In return for their gallantry, the king promised the two men immunity.
- His gallantry was recognized in the posthumous award of the Navy Cross.
- He was the personification of intrepid gallantry and imperturbable courage.
- It was awarded for gallantry in the face of the enemy, or for gallant conduct.
- Their tradition of gallantry is typical of the Canadian Forces with their battle honours, with their thousands of dead in two world wars, and their countless awards for bravery.
- To borrow Emma's prophetic statement, "[Frank's] gallantry is really unanswerable" (III. vii, 333), and in the aftermath of Box Hill no account surfaces that can explain fully his motives or his part in the flirtation.
- But how strange, that a man of so abandoned a character should be the choice of a sister of Lord Orville! and how strange, that, almost at the moment of the union, he should be so importunate in gallantry to another woman!
- If I were your enemy, I could not use you ill when I saw Fortune do it too, and in gallantry and good nature both, I should think myself rather obliged to protect you from her injuries (if it lay in my power) than double them upon you.
- What a dreadful dreadful place this great world of yours is, Arthur; where husbands do not seem to care for their wives; where mothers do not love their children; where children love their nurses best; where men talk what they call gallantry!
- Indeed my fair one does not verbally declare in my favor; but then, according to the vulgar proverb, that actions speak louder than words, I have no reason to complain; since she evidently approves my gallantry, is pleased with my company, and listens to my flattery.
- She came up to me, though, with a sweet, sad expression in her face and a trusting look in her eyes that made my heart bound, as she laid her hands in mine and thanked me for what she called my gallantry; and I was so taken up by her words that I hardly noticed the scowl
- Beginning with the year 1730 it is brought down to 1894, and it is designed to demonstrate the existence at the present day of "adoptive lodges" wherein French gallantry once provided an inexpensive substitute for Masonry in which ladies had the privilege of participating.
- Besides, he began to find himself a mere novice in French gallantry, which is supported by an amazing volubility of tongue, and obsequious and incredible attention to trifles, a surprising faculty of laughing out of pure complaisance, and a nothingness of conversation which he could never attain.
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