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Castle   /kˈæsəl/   Listen
Castle

noun
1.
A large and stately mansion.  Synonym: palace.
2.
A large building formerly occupied by a ruler and fortified against attack.
3.
(chess) the piece that can move any number of unoccupied squares in a direction parallel to the sides of the chessboard.  Synonym: rook.
4.
Interchanging the positions of the king and a rook.  Synonym: castling.
verb
(past & past part. castled; pres. part. castling)
1.
Move the king two squares toward a rook and in the same move the rook to the square next past the king.



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"Castle" Quotes from Famous Books



... mighty wall.] This city of Derbent is an ancient towne hauing an olde castle therein, being situated vpon an hill called Castow, builded all of free stone much after our building, the walles very high and thicke, and was first erected by king Alexander the great, when he warred against the Persians and Medians, and then hee made a ...
— The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, • Richard Hakluyt

... castle of this King was a large and gloomy forest, and in the midst stood an old lime-tree, beneath whose branches splashed a little fountain; so, whenever it was very hot, the King's youngest daughter ran off into this wood, and sat down by the side of this fountain; and, when she ...
— The Frog Prince and Other Stories - The Frog Prince, Princess Belle-Etoile, Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp • Anonymous

... that all the royal family would be liberally pensioned, remained silent and gloomy. Napoleon was not pleased by this behavior, and in commending him to the hospitality of Talleyrand, at the splendid castle of Valencay, declared that his whole character could be summed up in a single word—sullen. Poor Talleyrand! he saw himself condemned to the "honorable mission" of turnkey to a dispossessed monarch whose guard of honor was a troop of eighty ...
— The Life of Napoleon Bonaparte - Vol. III. (of IV.) • William Milligan Sloane

... alterations to the owners themselves; who, as they are generally no great clerks, so they seem to have no large vocabulary about them, nor to be well skilled in prosody. The utmost extent of their genius lies in naming their country habitation by a hill, a mount, a brook, a burrow, a castle, a bawn, a ford, and the like ingenious conceits. Yet these are exceeded by others, whereof some have contrived anagramatical appellations, from half their own and their wives' names joined together: others only from the lady; as, for instance, a person whose wife's ...
— The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D., Vol. VII - Historical and Political Tracts--Irish • Jonathan Swift

... board; rim, the margin between the rim of a vessel and the liquid in it—'nū er gott beranda b. ā horninu,' now there is a good margin for carrying the horn, i.e. its contents are so diminished that it can be lifted without spilling. borg sf. fortress, castle. borg-hlið sn. castle gate. bōt sf. 3, mending, improvement; plur. *bœtr*, compensation. bǫrn see *barn*. brā sf. eyelid. brā see *bregða*. bragð sn. trick, stratagem [bregða]. brann see *bręnna*. brast see *bresta*. brātt adv. quickly. braut sf. way—*ā braut*, adv. away. ...
— An Icelandic Primer - With Grammar, Notes, and Glossary • Henry Sweet


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