Cavaliers

/ˌkævəˈlɪrz/ noun

Definition

Mounted soldiers or knights; supporters of King Charles I during the English Civil War; people with a carefree, gallant attitude.

Etymology

From French 'cavalier' from Italian 'cavaliere' meaning horseman, from Latin 'caballus' (horse). The term evolved from describing mounted warriors to characterizing a dashing, somewhat reckless attitude.

Kelly Says

During the English Civil War, 'Cavalier' was actually an insult hurled by Puritans at the king's supporters, implying they were frivolous horsemen. The Cavaliers embraced the name, turning it into a badge of honor for their flamboyant lifestyle.

Translations

AMአማርኛ
ፈረሰኞች
fereseṇyoch
ARالعربية
فرسان
fursān
BNবাংলা
ঘোড়সওয়ার
ghoṛosōyār
CACatalà
genets
ʒəˈnɛts
CSČeština
jezdcí
jɛzd͡ʒciː
DADansk
riddere
ʁeðəʁə
DEDeutsch
Reiter
ˈʁaɪtɐ
ELΕλληνικά
ιππείς
ippeís
ESEspañol
caballeros
kaβaˈjeɾos
FAفارسی
سوارکاران
sawārkārān
FISuomi
ratsuväki
rɑtsuʋæki
FRFrançais
cavaliers
kavalye
GUGU
ઘોડેસવાર
ghōḍesavār
HAHA
masu keken horse
masu keken horse
HEעברית
פרשים
parashim
HIहिन्दी
सैनिक
sainik
HUMagyar
lovagok
lovaɡok
IDBahasa Indonesia
kesatria
kəsatria
IGIG
ndị na-akwọ ụgbọ ngwa
ndị na-akwọ ụgbọ ngwa
ITItaliano
cavalieri
kavalyˈɛri
JA日本語
騎士
kishi
KKKK
жаяу әскер
jayaw əsker
KMKM
អ្នកជិះសេះ
nek chiḥ saeh
KO한국어
기사
gisa
MRMR
घोडदळ
ghōḍadaḷ
MSBahasa Melayu
penunggang kuda
pənuŋɡaŋ kuda
MYမြန်မာ
မြင်းစီး
myiŋʔsí
NLNederlands
ruiters
rœy.tərs
NONorsk
riddere
rɪdərə
PAPA
ਘੁੜਸਵਾਰ
ghuṛasavār
PLPolski
jeźdźcy
jɛʐd͡ʑt͡ɕy
PTPortuguês
cavaleiros
kavɐˈlejɾuʃ
RORomână
cavaleri
kavaleˈri
RUРусский
кавалеры
kavalery
SVSvenska
ryttare
rʏtːaɾɛ
SWKiswahili
wafanya farasi
wafanya farasi
TAதமிழ்
காவலர்
kāvalar
TEతెలుగు
అశ్వికులు
aśvikulu
THไทย
ม้า
máː
TLTL
mangangabayo
mɑŋɡɑŋɡɑˈbɑjo
TRTürkçe
süvariler
syvɑriˈleɾ
UKУкраїнська
вершники
veršnyky
URاردو
سوار
sawār
VITiếng Việt
kị binh
kị˧˧ ʔɓïŋ˧˧
YOYO
awọn ọkọ
awọn ọkọ
ZH中文
骑士
qíshì
ZUZU
abaseli
abaseli

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Historically gendered masculine; figures of romance were coded male. The term carries aristocratic maleness from 17th-century usage.

Inclusive Usage

Use neutrally when referring to historical movements or attitudes. Specify gender only when historical accuracy requires it.

Inclusive Alternatives

["supporters","loyalists","defenders","protagonists"]

Related Words

Explore More Words

Get the Word Orb API

Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.