Definition
In heraldry, dressed or clothed; represented as wearing garments or armor (used to describe animals depicted in coats of arms).
Etymology
From French habillé 'dressed,' past participle of habiller 'to dress' (from Frankish habitāre). The term is specialized to heraldic description of creatures shown in attire.
Kelly Says
Medieval heralds had words for everything—a habille lion meant one shown wearing clothes or armor, which was absurd to imagine but made logical sense in the symbolic language of coats of arms.
Translations
CSČeština
obléká
o-blé-ka
DEDeutsch
kleidet
klay-det
FAفارسی
پوشیدن
po-she-deen
FRFrançais
habille
a-bil-le
HIहिन्दी
पहनता है
pa-han-ta hai
HUMagyar
öltöztet
olt-o-z-tet
IDBahasa Indonesia
memakai
me-ma-kai
ITItaliano
abbiglia
a-b-bi-g-lia
KKKK
кәсіпкер
ka-si-p-ker
MRMR
शक्ती देणारा
shak-tee de-na-ra
MSBahasa Melayu
memakai
me-ma-kai
NLNederlands
kleedt
klay-dt
RORomână
îmbracă
im-bra-ca
RUРусский
одевает
o-de-va-et
SVSvenska
kläder
klay-der
SWKiswahili
kuvaa
koo-vaa
TAதமிழ்
அணிவது
a-ni-va-thu
TEతెలుగు
ధరించు
dha-rin-chu
TRTürkçe
giydirir
ji-di-rir
UKУкраїнська
одягає
o-dia-ga-ye
VITiếng Việt
trang điểm
trang-diem