parade

views updated Jun 11 2018

pa·rade / pəˈrād/ • n. 1. a public procession, esp. one celebrating a special day or event and including marching bands and floats. ∎  a formal march or gathering of troops for inspection or display. ∎  a series of people or things appearing or being displayed one after the other: the parade of Hollywood celebrities who troop onto his show. ∎  a distasteful manifestation of a particular quality or kind of behavior: the parade of lunacy and corruption will continue.2. a parade ground. ∎ Brit. a public square or promenade. ∎ Brit. a row of stores: a shopping parade.• v. [intr.] walk or march in public in a formal procession or in an ostentatious or attention-seeking way: officers will parade through the town center. ∎  [tr.] walk or march in such a way along (the streets of a town): carefree young men were parading the streets. ∎  [tr.] display (someone or something) while marching or moving around a place: revolutionary guards paraded him through the streets. ∎  [tr.] display (something) publicly in order to impress or attract attention: he paraded his knowledge. ∎  (parade as) appear falsely as; masquerade as: these untruths parading as history. ∎  (of troops) assemble for a formal inspection or ceremonial occasion: the recruits were due to parade that day.PHRASES: on parade taking part in a parade. ∎  on public display: politicians are always on parade.DERIVATIVES: pa·rad·er n.

parade

views updated May 23 2018

parade show, display; mustering of troops for inspection, etc.; place of such assembly; public square or promenade; †parry. XVII. — F. — Sp. parada :- Rom. *parāta, sb. use of fem. pp. of L. parāre PREPARE, with various specific applications in Rom.; see -ADE.
Hence vb. XVII.

Parade

views updated May 14 2018

Parade. ‘Ballet réaliste’ in 1 act with mus. by Satie to lib. by Cocteau, choreog. Massine, décor Picasso. Prod. Paris 1917 ( Diaghilev's Ballet Russe, cast incl. Lopokova and Massine).

Parade

views updated May 21 2018

Parade ★★★ 1974

A series of vignettes in a circus, “Parade” is actually a play within a play, meshing the action with events offstage. 85m/C VHS . FR Jacques Tati; D: Jacques Tati; W: Jacques Tati.

parade

views updated May 14 2018

parade.
1. Place (parade-ground) where troops assemble for parade.

2. Level space forming the interior or enclosed area of a fortification.

3. Public square or promenade.

Parade

views updated May 21 2018

Parade

a procession of animals or people; an assembly of people, especially of promenaders. See also cortège, procession.

Examples : parade of coaches, 1673; of elephants; of firemen; of promenaders; of soldiers, 1656.