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But who knows what the galloon contemplates in the dead of night?
Had there been a doubtful button or a galloon wanting I should have spotted it."
Galloon - a metallic braid used for trimming clothing and uniforms.
The edges and other places might be trimmed and reinforced with a narrow ribbon called "galloon".
Between the spiral slashes, galloon braiding separated rows of pearls.
The simple panel drapery was trimmed in galloon and the woven tape used in the valance.
The man called Randall smiled coolly and picked imaginary foreign bodies off the galloon braiding of his immaculate dark green coat.
A soutache is narrow flat decorative braid, a type of galloon, used in the trimming of drapery or clothing.
An angel appeared to him and following his directions, Tigernach sought out the boundary of the kingdom to make his first foundation, namely Galloon.
Galloon is a decorative woven trim sometimes in the form of a braid and commonly made of metallic gold or silver thread, lace, or embroidery.
Galloon is used in the trim of military and police uniforms, ecclesiastical dress, and as trim on textiles, drapery, and upholstery.
A Boeing 747 uses approximately one galloon of fuel per second - over the course of a ten hour flight, it might burn 36,00 galloons of fuel.
Even the language of ornate textiles and trim - the gimp, galloon and lampas - has grown so rarefied that perhaps only Scrabble champs can define the words.
Troopers were outfitted with khaki shirts with contrasting shoulder passant, cuffs, and pocket lapels on Fern green and trimmed in Old Gold galloon.
He resigned Waterford and Armagh in 1637, and in that year became rector of Galloon in Monaghan and dean of Derry.
The first foundation by Tigernach, in about the same area, is Gabáil-liúin, now Galloon Island, Upper Lough Erne (Co.
For many years, the trimming department, where the ornate silk tape (a galloon) and drapery trim and upholstery edging (gimp) was made, has been the weaver's equivalent of Mount Everest.
Constantine Michael Scollen was born on Galloon Island, Upper Lough Erne, near the village of Newtonbutler, County Fermanagh, Ireland on 4th April 1841.
Constantine Scollen (4th April 1841 - 8th November 1902) Rev Fr Constantine Michael Scollen was born just outside the village, on Galloon Island in Loch Erne.
What they believed was a window on their nature, and sometimes when Locke spoke about one of the theories, she would mention, in passing, "The Galloon don't believe in time, either," or with a tisk-tisking tone, she would warn Locke, "The harum-scarums despise the idea of parallel realities.