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EPAULETTE (a French word, from epaule, a shoulder) , properly a shoulder-piece, and so applied to the shoulder-knot of ribbon to which a scapulary was attached, worn by members of a religiousSee also: order
.
The military usage was probably derived from the See also: metal See also: plate (epauletre) which protected the shoulder in the defensive See also: armour of the 16th century
.
It was first used merely as a shoulder knot to fasten the See also: baldric, and the application of it to mark distinctive grades of See also: rank was begun in See also: France at the See also: suggestion, it is said, of See also: Charles
See also: Louis Auguste Fouquet, duc de Belle-Isle, in 1759
.
In
See also: modern times it always appears as a shoulder See also: ornament for military and See also: naval See also: uniforms
.
At first it consisted merely of a fringe See also: hanging from the end of the shoulder-strap or cord over the sleeve, but towards the end of the 18th century it became a solid ornament, consisting of a flat shoulder-piece, extended beyond the point of the shoulder into an See also: oval plate, from the edge of which hangs a thick fringe, in the See also: case of See also: officers of gold or See also: silver
.
The epaulette is worn in the See also: British See also: navy by officers above the rank of sub-See also: lieutenant; in the army it ceased to be worn about 1855
.
It is worn by officers in the See also: United States navy above the rank of ensign; since 1872 it is only worn by general officers in the army
.
In most other countries epaulettes are worn by officers, and in the French army by the men also, with a fringe of worsted, various distinctions of shape and colour being observed between ranks, corps and arms of the service
.
The " See also: scale " is similar to the epaulette, but has no fringe
.
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Watching an installment of Saturday Night Live (fall of 2008), the lead singer of the featured band - The Killers - wore a business-type suit jacket adorned with bird feathers attached to the shoulders as epaulettes, formal military uniform-like. I do not speak French, but it occurs to me that "epaulettes" are rather like the feathers of birds. It was seeing that band member's uniform that I realized that the word "epaulletes", of French origin, probably derives from the same etymology as what has become the word "poultry".
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