mounted+soldier

  • 71Saddle ring — A saddle ring is a metal ring attached to the receiver of a rifle or carbine allowing it to be tied to a saddle or used with a special sling.cite web |url=http://www.midwayusa.com/guntecdictionary.exe/showterm?TermID=4194 |title=GunTec Dictionary …

    Wikipedia

  • 72Historia de la Guardia del Palacio de Gobierno del Perú — Para la actual Guardia de Honor del Palacio de Gobierno del Perú, véase Húsares de Junín. Palacio de Gobierno del Perú y Dragones de la Guardia del Regimiento de Caballería Mariscal Nieto Escolta del Presidente de la República La Guardia de Honor …

    Wikipedia Español

  • 73cavalier — cavalierism, cavalierness, n. cavalierly, adv. /kav euh lear , kav euh lear /, n. 1. a horseman, esp. a mounted soldier; knight. 2. one having the spirit or bearing of a knight; a courtly gentleman; gallant. 3. a man escorting a woman or acting… …

    Universalium

  • 74knight — knightless, adj. /nuyt/, n. 1. a mounted soldier serving under a feudal superior in the Middle Ages. 2. (in Europe in the Middle Ages) a man, usually of noble birth, who after an apprenticeship as page and squire was raised to honorable military… …

    Universalium

  • 75Knight — noun An English status surname for someone who was a mounted soldier …

    Wiktionary

  • 76Cush — In the medieval period and even earlier the holder of this name would rarely have been out of a job. Generally recorded in the spellings of Cush, Cuss(e), or even Kiss(e), the derivation is from the Old French Cuisse and referred to the makers of …

    Surnames reference

  • 77Cushe — In the medieval period and even earlier the holder of this name would rarely have been out of a job. Generally recorded in the spellings of Cush, Cuss(e), or even Kiss(e), the derivation is from the Old French Cuisse and referred to the makers of …

    Surnames reference

  • 78Cuss — In the medieval period and even earlier the holder of this name would rarely have been out of a job. Generally recorded in the spellings of Cush, Cuss(e), or even Kiss(e), the derivation is from the Old French Cuisse and referred to the makers of …

    Surnames reference

  • 79Kiss — In the medieval period and even earlier the holder of this name would rarely have been out of a job. Generally recorded in the spellings of Cush, Cuss(e), or even Kiss(e), the derivation is from the Old French Cuisse and referred to the makers of …

    Surnames reference

  • 80Knevet — This long established surname is English but of Norman French origins. Introduced into England at the famous Conquest of 1066, it derives from the word cnivet , which was the Norman form of the Olde English pre 7th Century word cniht , the later… …

    Surnames reference