11 adjectives to describe cockades

Only instead of wearing a large tri-colored, cockade, they wore a large white cockade.

During the early part of the first Revolution, its gardens became the resort of the most violent politicians; here, the tri-coloured cockade was first adopted, and the popular party decided on many of its bolder measures.

The Prince of Orange was then at Salisbury, as young Esmond learned from seeing Dr. Tusher in his best cassock, with a great orange cockade in his broad-leafed hat, and Nahun, his clerk, ornamented with a like decoration.

Only instead of wearing a large tri-colored, cockade, they wore a large white cockade.

And once there, who or what could have prevented that tipsy royalist enthusiasm, the wild burst of sympathy, the trampling of the tri-color cockade?

The latter wore the dress of the Matyas Hussarsa gray dolmany, with crimson cord; he held a crimson csako, with a tricolored cockade, in his hand.

But her eyes never wandered from him; and I myself thought he never looked so handsome and courtly as he did now, in his officer's uniform and black cockade.

She approached with downcast eyes, holding in her small white hands an embroidered cockade, which she placed on his breast.

* "THE REG'LAR ARMY MAN" He ain't no gold-laced "Belvidere," Ter sparkle in the sun; He do'n't parade with gay cockade, And posies in his gun; He ain't no "pretty soldier boy," So lovely, spick and span, He wears a crust of tan and dust, The Reg'lar Army man; The marchin', parchin', Pipe-clay starchin', Reg'lar Army man.

It was the Emperor's soft flat beaver with the little tricolour cockade.

You cannot feed his massive trunk On fairy tales of beaten foes, Or Hindenburg's "victorious" bunk; And if his rations run too short Through this accursed British blockade, Even the worm may turn and sport A revolutionary cockade.

11 adjectives to describe  cockades