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Definitions

oriflamme

[awr-uh-flam, or-] / ˈɔr əˌflæm, ˈɒr- /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Speaking before the Detroit Economic Club, Mr. Crawford rarely mentioned the Association's oriflamme of "free private enterprise" without interpolating the word "competitive" in lieu of "private."

From Time Magazine Archive

As London topers know, these lines are the doggerel oriflamme of that immemorial public house, "Finch's in the Strand."

From Time Magazine Archive

His white hands and fuzzy platinum hair gleaming like an oriflamme, he led the youths through a spirited charge on Bach.

From Time Magazine Archive

Before San Francisco's famed Commonwealth Club, where the late President Roosevelt first raised the oriflamme of the New Deal, the Ford Co.'s 28-year-old president went back to old principles.

From Time Magazine Archive

At remote intervals the oriflamme of the spiritual conception of nature has flashed athwart the intervals of gross materialism, but religion, moral conduct, not knowledge, has been the motive.

From Studies in the Out-Lying Fields of Psychic Science by Tuttle, Hudson