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cuir-bouilli
/ ˌkwɪəbuːˈjiː /
noun
- a type of leather hardened by soaking in wax, used for armour before the 14th century
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Word History and Origins
Origin of cuir-bouilli1
French, literally: boiled leather
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Example Sentences
Cuir-bouilli, leather softened by boiling, during which process it took any form or impression required, and afterwards hardened.
From Project Gutenberg
At the side is a cuir bouilli crupper as worn by the English heavy cavalry in the sixteenth century.
From Project Gutenberg
In order to protect the knee, a knee-cap, or genouillire of cuir bouilli, was fastened over it.
From Project Gutenberg
The style was none other than a piecing together of the best features of chain mail, plate, and cuir-bouilli.
From Project Gutenberg
When it had dried to a fitting hardness it was covered with cuir-bouilli, or boiled leather, which made it watertight.
From Project Gutenberg
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