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Parade   /pərˈeɪd/   Listen
Parade

noun
1.
A ceremonial procession including people marching.
2.
An extended (often showy) succession of persons or things.  "A parade of witnesses"
3.
A visible display.
verb
(past & past part. paraded; pres. part. parading)
1.
Walk ostentatiously.  Synonyms: exhibit, march.
2.
March in a procession.  Synonyms: promenade, troop.



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"Parade" Quotes from Famous Books



... a thing distinct and apart; for in Paris neither men nor women are the dupes of the commonplaces by which people seek to throw a veil over their motives, or to parade a fine affectation of disinterestedness in their sentiments. In this country within a country, it is not merely required of a woman that she should satisfy the senses and the soul; she knows perfectly well that she has still greater ...
— Father Goriot • Honore de Balzac

... these old countries. It got on the nerves of Europe. They knew what it all meant. It was an army that in recent times had waged three wars, all of conquest, and the unceasing tramp of its legions through the streets of Prussia, on the parade grounds of Prussia, had got into the Prussian head. The Kaiser, when he witnessed on a grand scale his reviews, got drunk with the sound of it. He delivered the law to the world as if Potsdam was another Sinai, and he was uttering the law from ...
— Winning a Cause - World War Stories • John Gilbert Thompson and Inez Bigwood

... veterans in cadence step. As a mere spectacle this march of the mightiest host the continent has ever seen was grand and imposing, but it was not as a spectacle alone that it affected the beholder. It was no holiday parade. It was an army of citizens on their way home after a long and terrible war. Their clothes were worn, and pierced with bullets, their banners had been torn with shot and shell, and lashed in the winds of many ...
— The Boys' Life of Abraham Lincoln • Helen Nicolay

... who were present in the Southern army at this time will bear record to the soldierly promptness of officers and men. On the evening of the 3d of May the camps were the scenes of noise, merriment, and parade: the bands played; the woods were alive; nothing disturbed the scene of general enjoyment of winter-quarters. On the morning of the 4th all this was changed. The camps were deserted; no sound was anywhere heard; the troops were twenty miles away, ...
— A Life of Gen. Robert E. Lee • John Esten Cooke

... mansions of the affluent stood among pleasant lawns and shrubberies. It was late; for this had been a communion Sunday, and those far in advance, who had already reached the pretty and shady part of the street, were members of the churches where services had been shortest; though few in the long parade looked as if they had been attending anything very short, and many heads of families were crisp in their replies to the theological inquiries of their offspring. The men imparted largely a gloom to the itinerant concourse, most of them wearing hot, long black ...
— The Conquest of Canaan • Booth Tarkington


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