Associations to the word «Doublet»
Noun
- Quartet
- Purple
- Ribbon
- Drawer
- Front
- Differentiation
- Jewelry
- Clothing
- Pair
- Sheath
- Silhouette
- Leather
- Peak
- Button
- Flint
- Breadth
- Scarf
- Pink
- Atom
- Shoulder
- Ruby
- Pawn
- Fur
- Gem
- Resonance
- Friar
- Fabric
- Thrust
- Stool
- Hive
- Wavelength
- Conan
- Electron
- Colour
- Absorption
- Hood
- Intensity
- Glove
- Cut
- Hip
- Archer
- Epithet
- Neck
- Spur
- Malta
- Packet
- Sodium
- Piper
- Twa
- Silver
- Yellow
- Nucleus
- Englishman
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
DOUBLET, noun. A man’s close-fitting jacket, with or without sleeves. Men in Europe wore doublets from the 1400s to the 1600s.
DOUBLET, noun. A pair of two similar or equal things; couple.
DOUBLET, noun. (linguistics) One of two or more different words in a language derived from the same origin but coming by different routes (e.g., toucher and toquer in French or yard and garden in English).
DOUBLET, noun. (literature) In textual criticism, two different narrative accounts of the same actual event.
DOUBLET, noun. (lapidary) An imitation gem made of two pieces of glass or crystal with a layer of color between them.
DOUBLET, noun. (printing) (US) A word or phrase set a second time by mistake.
DOUBLET, noun. (quantum mechanics) A quantum state of a system with a spin of 1/2, such that there are two allowed values of the spin component, -1/2 and +1/2.
DOUBLET, noun. (computing) A word (or rather, a halfword) consisting of two bytes
DOUBLET, noun. (botany) A very small flowering plant, Dimeresia howellii
DOUBLET, noun. A word ladder puzzle.
DOUBLET, noun. An arrangement of two lenses for a microscope, designed to correct spherical aberration and chromatic dispersion, thus rendering the image of an object more clear and distinct.
DOUBLET, noun. Either of two dice, each of which, when thrown, has the same number of spots on the face lying uppermost.
DOUBLET, noun. (uncountable) A game somewhat like backgammon.
Dictionary definition
DOUBLET, noun. A man's close-fitting jacket; worn during the Renaissance.
Wise words
Abuse of words has been the great instrument of sophistry
and chicanery, of party, faction, and division of society.