coronation

/ˌkɑ-/

UK: /kɒɹəˈneɪʃn̩/

coronation

English Noun Top 12,911
American (Lessac) (medium)
Female 0.9s
American (Amy) (medium)
Female 1.2s
American (Ryan) (medium)
Male 0.8s
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Definition

An act of investing with a crown; a crowning.

Etymology

From Late Middle English coronacion, coronacioun (“crowning of a sovereign or his consort; powers conferred by this ceremony; crowning of the Virgin Mary; (figuratively) placing of a crown of thorns on Jesus; act of rewarding a person with eternal life, happiness, honour, etc.”) [and other forms], borrowed from Anglo-Norman coronacion and Old French coronacion, coronation, from Late Latin *corōnātiōnem, from Latin corōnō (“to coronate, crown (with a crown, garland, etc.)”) + -ātiōnem (suffix forming nouns relating to actions or their results). Corōnō is derived from corōna (“garland, wreath; crown”).

Example Sentences

  • "[A]nd if vvee be Spouſes of this Bridegroom [Jesus], vvee cannot but (as vvee are exhorted) rejoyce in that the marriage of the Lambe is come, and the day of our ovvn coronation vvith an incorruptible Crovvn of glory."
  • "King Charles III’s coronation is to be much less elaborate compared to his mother’s."
  • "Some reaſons of this double Corronation / I haue poſſeſſt you vvith, and thinke them ſtrong."
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